Is Obesity a Risk Factor for Carotid Atherosclerotic Disease?—Opportunistic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Data Sources and Search
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Data Extraction—Outcomes-Definitions
3. Results
- -
- The majority of the studies (34) were cross-sectional, and four were longitudinal.
- -
- A total of 35,339 subjects (49.20% men) were included: 26,492 from Europe, 4239 from Asia, 3859 from North America, 384 from South America, and 365 from Africa (Table 1). Some studies only included a specific group of patients: Type 2 diabetes (5 papers), women (4), patients with an autoimmune disease (4), or hypertension (3) (Table 2).
3.1. Overall Obesity and the Prevalence of Carotid Plaques
3.2. Overall Obesity and the Characteristics of the Carotid Plaques
- (1).
- Histological analysis of carotid plaques (390) concluded that obesity, defined as BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 was an independent risk factor for carotid plaque destabilization, particularly in males [4]. Obesity was correlated with the presence of unstable carotid plaques, characterized by a high degree of inflammation, thinning, and rupture of the cap [4].
- (2).
- One study analyzed the plaque echogenicity by gray-scale median using ultrasound and concluded that low gray-scale median values were related to high BMI [24]. Plaques with a low gray-scale median had a higher probability of causing embolization and symptoms. This research included 179 diabetic patients [24].
- (3).
- One research paper found that obesity (BMI > 30.0 kg/m2) was associated with increased carotid plaque necrotic core volume and calcification independently of diabetes mellitus status [36]. The carotid plaque composition was assessed by magnetic resonance imaging. Obesity was determined by BMI [36]. The study included 78 patients with short-duration Type 2 diabetes mellitus and 91 sex- and aged-matched control subjects [36].
- (1).
- (2).
- One study found that the measures of adiposity (BMI, the systemic fat mass, and the fat-free mass determined with DXA) were not significantly different in patients with higher plaques score [8]. For each segment, the degree of plaque was graded as follows: 0 = no plaque; 1 = 1 small plaque. <30% of vessel diameter; 2 = 1 medium plaque between 30% of vessel diameter or multiple small plaques; and 3 = 1 large plaque >50% of the vessel diameter or multiple plaques with at least 1 medium plaque [8]. The grades were summed across the right and left carotid arteries to create an overall measure of the extent of focal plaque [8]. This study included 52 patients [8].
- (3).
- (1).
- A histological study analyzed the relationship between obesity and the severity of atherosclerosis carotid plaque [19]. The atherosclerotic lesions were described according to the American Heart Association classification [19]. BMI did not independently predict the risk of developing advanced carotid atherosclerotic lesions (including 185 cadavers of men and women) [19].
- (2).
3.3. Visceral Adipose Tissue and the Prevalence of Carotid Plaque
3.4. Visceral Adipose Tissue and the Characteristics of the Carotid Plaque
3.5. Subcutaneous Adipose Tissue and Carotid Plaque
4. Discussion and Conclusions
4.1. Strengths and Limitations
4.2. Implications for Practice
4.3. Concluding Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
References
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Study | Year | Country | Type of Study | Total Number of Patients | Quality of Studies MINOR CRITERIA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bogousslavsky et al. [5] | 1985 | Switzerland | Cross-sectional | 477 | 3 |
Lakka et al. [6] | 2001 | Finland | Longitudinal | 774 | 12 |
Hunt et al. [7] | 2002 | USA | Cross-sectional | 750 | 14 |
Hegazi et al. [8] | 2003 | USA | Cross-sectional | 52 | 12 |
Czernichow et al. [9] | 2005 | France | Cross-sectional | 1014 | 13 |
Hadjiev et al. [10] | 2003 | Bulgaria | Cross-sectional | 500 | 14 |
De Souza et al. [11] | 2005 | Brazil | Cross-sectional | 144 | 14 |
Montalcini et al. [12] | 2006 | Italy | Cross-sectional | 313 | 14 |
Lear et al. [12] | 2007 | Canada | Cross-sectional | 794 | 14 |
Park et al. [13] | 2007 | Korea | Cross-sectional | 378 | 14 |
Irace et al. [14] | 2009 | Italy | Cross-sectional | 1842 | 12 |
Yu et al. [15] | 2009 | Hong Kong | Cross-sectional | 518 | 13 |
Terzis et al. [16] | 2011 | Greece | Longitudinal | 106 | 14 |
Kadoglou et al. [17] | 2012 | Greece | Longitudinal | 112 | 12 |
Solomon et al. [18] | 2012 | South Africa | Cross-sectional | 203 | 12 |
Rodríguez-Flores et al. [19] | 2013 | Mexico | Cross-sectional | 185 | 14 |
Maksimovic et al. [20] | 2013 | Serbia | Cross-sectional | 657 | 14 |
Galarza-Delgado et al. [21] | 2013 | Mexico | Cross-sectional | 124 | 14 |
Cuspidi et al. [22] | 2013 | Italy | Cross-sectional | 3752 | 12 |
Chiquete et al. [23] | 2014 | Mexico | Cross-sectional | 533 | 12 |
Irie et al. [24] | 2014 | Japan | Cross-sectional | 179 | 12 |
Yan et al. [25] | 2014 | China | Cross-sectional | 911 | 12 |
Yuan et al. [26] | 2016 | USA | Cross-sectional | 1315 | 12 |
Pan et al. [27] | 2016 | China | Cross-sectional | 474 | 12 |
Radmard et al. [28] | 2016 | Iran | Cross-sectional | 191 | 12 |
Sandfort et al. [29] | 2016 | USA | Longitudinal | 106 | 12 |
Mitevska et al. [30] | 2017 | Macedonia | Cross sectional | 60 | 14 |
Higuchi et al. [31] | 2017 | Japan | Cross-sectional | 980 | 12 |
Mancusi et al. [32] | 2017 | Italy | Cross-sectional | 8815 | 14 |
Nishizawa et al. [33] | 2017 | Brazil | Cross-sectional | 240 | 12 |
Omisore et al. [34] | 2018 | Nigeria | Cross-sectional | 162 | 14 |
Imahori et al. [35] | 2018 | Norway | Cross-sectional | 4906 | 12 |
Laugesen et al. [36] | 2018 | Denmark | Cross-sectional | 169 | 12 |
Yoshida et al. [37] | 2018 | Japan | Cross-sectional | 352 | 14 |
Scicali et al. [38] | 2018 | Italy | Cross-sectional | 276 | 12 |
Rovella et al. [4] | 2018 | Italy | Cross-sectional | 390 | 12 |
Geraci et al. [39] | 2019 | Italy | Cross-sectional | 468 | 14 |
Haberka et al. [40] | 2019 | Poland | Cross-sectional | 391 | 14 |
Study | Age (Years) | Men (%) | Aims | Criteria | Method Used to Determine | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Inclusion | Exclusion | Overall Obesity | VAT | SAT | ||||
Bogousslavsky et al. [5] | 363 (76.1%) | Determine the relative importance of each cardiovascular risk factor according to the progression of local atheromatous obstruction | Patients with atheromatous internal carotid artery occlusion or stenosis, compared with matched control subjects without internal carotid artery disease and with matched patients with coronary heart disease but without internal carotid artery disease | Age < 50 years old, without anatomic verification of stenosis, with dissection, dysplasia, posttraumatic occlusion, or intake of oral contraceptives | According to medical charts | NA | NA | |
Lakka et al. [6] | NA | 774 (100%) | Whether WHR and WC are directly related to a 4-year increase in the indicators of common carotid atherosclerosis independent of BMI and other risk factors for atherosclerosis | Men, 42–60 years old, Complete information about anthropometric measures and carotid atherosclerosis | Coronary heart disease, stroke, claudication | BMI | WC WHR | HC WHR |
Hunt et al. [7] | 42.2 ± 15.9 | 289 (38.5%) | The extent to which the presence or absence of carotid artery plaque was under genetic control | Age: 40–60-year-old, that the proband has a living spouse who was willing to participate in the study, and that the proband has at least 6 first-degree relatives, excluding parents, who were at least 16 years of age and living in the San Antonio area | NA | BMI | WC | NA |
Hegazi et al. [8] | 51 ± 9 | 18 (35%) | Examine the relationship between obesity and regional patterns of adiposity, insulin resistance, and five independent measures of subclinical atherosclerosis | Volunteers with a prior diagnosis of Type 2 diabetes of known duration not longer than 5 years, age: 20–70 years, and stable weight, with overall good general health | Insulin treatment, current use of tobacco, prior history of myocardial infarction, stroke, or peripheral vascular disease | BMI DXA | CT scan. | CT scan. |
Czernichow et al. [9] | 59.4 ± 4.7 | 504 (49.7%) | Association of body composition assessed by bioimpedance analysis and anthropometric indicators of fat repartition with carotid structure and function | Volunteers Women aged: 35–60 years Men aged: 35–60 years | Disease likely to hinder participation or threaten 5 years survival. Extreme beliefs or behavior regarding diet | Bioimpedance BMI | WC WHR | HC WHR |
Hadjiev et al. [10] | 2003 | NA | This population-based biennial epidemiological survey has been designed to assess the prevalence of the multiple vascular risk factors, their distribution patterns, and outcomes among the Bulgarian urban population. | Without signs and symptoms of cerebrovascular disease, aged 50–79 years were enrolled in the study | NA | BMI | NA | NA |
De Souza et al. [11] | 34.0 ± 11.7 | 0 (0%) | Estimated the prevalence of atherosclerotic plaque in carotid arteries in systemic lupus erythematous patients and controls and verified possible associations between risk factors and carotid plaque | Women fulfilled the update American College of Rheumatology criteria for systemic lupus erythematosus | Controls excluded if they had an autoimmune disease | BMI | NA | NA |
Montalcini et al. [12] | 57.2 ± 7.37 | 0 (0%) | Investigate whether the subclinical carotid atherosclerosis prevalence is different in obese postmenopausal women with and without metabolic syndrome | Postmenopausal, Caucasian, aged 45–75 years | Diabetes cardiovascular disease arrhythmia | BMI | NA | NA |
Lear et al. [3] | 46.9 ± 8.7 | 389 (48.6%) | Hypothesized that the association between VAT and atherosclerosis is independent of total body fat, established risk factors, and measures of central adiposity | Healthy men and women (between 30 and 65 years of age) matched for ethnicity and BMI | Recent weight change, previous diagnosis of cardiovascular disease, significant comorbidity, had significant prosthetics or amputations, currently taking medications for cardiovascular risk factors | Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, CT scan BMI | CT scan WC WHR | CT scan WHR |
Park et al. [13] | 65.3 ± 12.2 | 204 (54%) | Elucidate the relationship between metabolic syndrome and cerebrovascular stenosis | Consecutive patients with acute ischemic stroke (large artery atherosclerosis, small artery occlusion, cardiac embolism, and ischemic stroke of undetermined etiology) | Strokes of other determined etiology (venous thrombosis, arterial dissection, or moyamoya disease and those with transient ischemic attack). Patients unable to stand with assistance, patients who had no relevant lesions on diffusion-weighted imaging, poor MR angiographic images, incomplete work up | NA | WC | NA |
Irace et al. [14] | 30–80 | 1002 (54.4%) | Evaluate the contribution of generalized adiposity, to carotid atherosclerosis, in participants with or without metabolic syndrome | Caucasians | BMI < 18.5 kg/m2, age < 30 years | BMI | WC | NA |
Yu et al. [15] | 56.4 ± 3.3 | 0 (0%) | Determine the prevalence of carotid plaque and identity its associated risk factors | Postmenopausal Chinese women aged 50–64 years | Surgical menopause, presence of cardiovascular disease, cancer and renal failure | BMI | WC WHR | WHR |
Terzis et al. [16] | 40.5 ± 1.1 | 60 (56.6%) | Assess associations between actual long-term changes in BMI since adolescence and early and advanced stages of subclinical atherosclerosis among a population of healthy young adults | This longitudinal study was based on a cohort initially recruited consecutively from two Athens high schools in 1983, collecting data on cardiovascular risk factors from a population of consecutive adolescents aged 12–17 years | Loss/change of contact information or decline to participate, or not alive | BMI | WC | NA |
Kadoglou et al. [17] | 65 ± 7.7 | 86 (76.8%) | Assess if apelin and visfatin correlate with carotid plaque echogenicity | Aged 56–80 years and overweight (BMI > 25 kg⁄m2 fat-mass > 30%) and with unilateral or bilateral carotid atherosclerosis without indications for intervention, not receiving lipid-lowering treatment | Cerebral hemorrhage, sources of cardioembolism, concurrent conditions, diseases interfering with the expression of inflammatory mediators during the previous 3 months | BMI Bioimpedance | WHR | WHR |
Solomon et al. [18] | 56.4 ± 10.9 | 0 (0%) | Ascertain the association between clinical obesity and atherosclerosis | African black women and Caucasian women who met the American College of Rheumatology criteria for rheumatoid arthritis | Infected with HIV | BMI | WC WHtR WHR | WHR |
Rodríguez-Flores et al. [19] | NA | 107 (57.8%) | Analyze the relationship between cardiovascular risk factors, including obesity, with the severity of atherosclerosis in different arterial territories | Cadavers of men and women aged 0 to 90 years | Arteries were not taken for examination in the following circumstances: when tissues had suffered advanced damage that precluded their analysis when the cadaver arrived more than 36 h after death, or in cases with previously reported congenital heart disease | BMI | NA | NA |
Maksimovic et al. [20] | 65.3 ± 8.4 | 412 (62.7%) | Investigate the relationship between abdominal obesity, and other atherosclerotic risk factors in patients with symptomatic carotid atherosclerotic disease | Subjects who had symptoms of cerebral ischemia and carotid stenosis of ≥50% | Age < 18 years, malignant disease, rheumatoid arthritis, or previous endarterectomy | NA | WC | NA |
Galarza-Delgado et al. [21] | 55.5 ± 13.1 | 13 (10.5%) | Association between the presence of rheumatoid nodules and plaque of the carotid artery | Met at least 4 American Colege of Rheumatology criteria for rheumatoid arthritis greater than 16 years | Pregnant patient, History of carotid surgery | BMI | WC | NA |
Cuspidi et al. [22] | 53.3 ± 12.6 | 1977 (52.7%) | Risk of developing left ventricular hypertrophy and carotid atherosclerosis is different in men and women with metabolic syndrome | Uncomplicated essential hypertension | Previous clinically overt cardiovascular disease, secondary causes of hypertension, life-threatening conditions | NA | WC | NA |
Chiquete et al. [23] | 69.2 | 211 (39.6%) | Identify risk factors associated with moderate to severe carotid stenosis | History of ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack or at least two cardiovascular risk factors (Age ≥ 55 years, hypertension, dyslipidemia, smoking habits, obesity or diabetes) | NA | BMI | NA | NA |
Irie et al. [24] | 65 ± 7 | 147 (82%) | Clarify the parameters related to the echogenicity of carotid plaque | Age ≥ 40 years, Type 2 diabetes, presence of carotid plaques | History of ischemic stroke, coronary heart disease, peripheral artery disease, elevated liver enzymes, renal insufficiency | BMI | NA | NA |
Yan et al. [25] | 68.1 (4.9) | 370 (40.6%) | Investigate the association of the metabolic syndrome components with subclinical atherosclerosis | Age ≥ 60 years | Patients with clinical stroke, coronary heart disease, or heart failure | BMI | WC | NA |
Yuan et al. [26] | 58.9 (9.7) | 552 (42.0%) | Assess relationships between anthropometric measures and adipose tissue volumes with subclinical cardiovascular disease in carotid arteries | Type 2 diabetes | Prior coronary artery procedures. Absence of coronary artery calcification | BMI | WC CT scan | CT scan |
Pan et al. [27] | NA | 231 (48.7%) | Identify risk factors associated with carotid atherosclerosis | Relatively healthy populations residing in Northeast China | Excessive alcohol consumption, severe hepatitis B or C, liver disease, mental illness, severe cardiac or pulmonary insufficiency, and cancer | BMI | WC | NA |
Radmard et al. [28] | 57 ± 5.7 | 92 (48.2%) | Association between quantitative measures of central adiposity with indicators of carotid atherosclerosis | Aged over 50 | Contraindications for MRI | BMI | WHR WHtR MRI | WHR WHtR MRI |
Sandfort et al. [29] | 65 | 67 (63%) | Evaluate the change of atherosclerosis in the carotid artery wall in hyperlipidemic participants during treatment with statins and determine cardiovascular risk factors associated with change in extent of atherosclerosis | Age ≥ 55 years and an indication for lipid-lowering therapy | Contraindication for statin therapy, use of nonstatin lipid-lowering therapy, and ineligibility for MRI scan | BMI | NA | NA |
Mitevska et al. [30] | 67 ± 6 | 34 (56.7%) | Evaluate the risk factor profile, presence of asymptomatic carotid artery disease, and predictors of coronary artery disease in asymptomatic Type 2 diabetic patients | Asymptomatic patients with Type 2 diabetes | Typical stable angina pectoris, previously known or established as coronary artery disease, left ventricular ejection fraction < 50% at rest, severe valvular disease, atrial fibrillation, left bundle branch block, presence of a pacemaker, severe chronic pulmonary disease | BMI | NA | NA |
Higuchi et al. [31] | 59.0 ± 11.5 | 655 (67%) | Evaluate the clinical impact of visceral fat accumulation on the cerebrovascular lesions | Japanese aged ≥ 40 years | NA | BMI | WHR CT scan | WHR CT scan |
Mancusi et al. [32] | 54.0 ± 11.5 | 5104 (57.9%) | Impact of obesity on carotid target organ damage | Hypertensive patients without prevalent cardiovascular disease | Cardiovascular disease: myocardial infarction, angina, coronary revascularization, stroke, transitory ischemic attack, or congestive heart failure requiring hospitalization | BMI | NA | NA |
Nishizawa et al. [33] | 64.8 ± 15.3 | 151 (62.9%) | Investigate the association between abdominal visceral fat with atherosclerosis in the aorta, coronary, carotid, and cerebral arteries in an autopsy study | Aged ≥ 30 years | Family provided inconsistent information during the clinical interview, the family had less than weekly contact with the deceased, the next of kin was unable to participate due to emotional suffering, subjects who had lost 10% or more of regular weight during the six months prior to death, arteries or visceral fat was retained at autopsy by the pathologist, subjects with post mortem interval ≥ 24 h, and subjects with signs of body autolysis according to the Crossley criteria | NA | Omental, mesenteric, mesocolon, and perirenal fat were dissected after the autopsy and weighed. The VAT was the sum of the omental, mesenteric, mesocolon and perirenal fat | NA |
Omisore et al [34]. | 52.0 ± 15.1 | 80 (49.4%) | Evaluated the impact of traditional cardiovascular risk factors on carotid atherosclerosis in a sample of Nigerian adults | Adults aged 18 years and older | NA | BMI | NA | NA |
Imahori et al. [35] | (60–72) | 2184 (44.5%) | Evaluate the associations between adiposity measures and the presence of carotid plaque | Right carotid artery | NA | BMI | WC, WHR, WHtR | WHR, WHtR |
Laugesen et al. [36] | 59 ± 9.4 | 86 (50.9%) | Assess plaque composition by carotid magnetic resonance imaging | Age > 18 years, diagnosis of Type 2 diabetes mellitus and known duration of diabetes mellitus < 5 years | Acute or chronic infectious disease, end-stage renal failure, pregnancy or lactation, prior or present cancer, and contraindications to MRI (including body weight > 120 kg). | Fat percentage was assessed by whole-body dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. BMI | WHR | WHR |
Yoshida et al. [37] | 61.8 ± 11.9 | 60 (17%) | Determine the association between obesity and/or VAT and the risk for atherosclerosis | Age > 18 years, Japanese rheumatoid arthritis patients | Presence of an internal or external electronic device, severely degraded health status, presence of fractures and pain preventing assessment of visceral and subcutaneous fat, WC < 57 cm, poor physical health on the day of examination, and concurrent cancer and hepatitis treatment, dialysis, and/or sex-hormone suppression or replacement therapy | BMI | Bioimpedance | Bioimpedance |
Scicali et al. [38] | 56.8 ± 8.0 | 183 (66.3%) | Investigate the presence of carotid plaque in overweight patients | BMI: 25–29.9 kg/m2, age: 40–70 years, and at least one cardiovascular risk factor (hypertension, dyslipidemia, or current smoking) | Previous history of diabetes, coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, peripheral artery disease, or clinical evidence of advanced renal disease | BMI | WHR WC | NA |
Rovella et al. [4] | 69.8 (7.2) | 273 (70%) | Evaluate by histology the role of obesity in the destabilization of carotid plaques | Submitted to carotid endarterectomy AND Symptomatic patients with thrombo-embolism due to carotid atherosclerosis OR Asymptomatic patients with carotid stenosis ≥ 60% | Cardiac source of embolization, stenosis greater than 50% of Willis circle | BMI | NA | NA |
Geraci et al. [39] | 58 ± 14 | 279 (59.6%) | Relationship between anthropometric indices of adiposity and carotid atherosclerosis | Caucasian patients, age: 30–80 years with essential hypertension | BMI > 40 kg/m2, Renovascular, endocrine, or malignant hypertension, Carotid thromboendarterectomy and/or percutaneous carotid angioplasty, Pre-existing cardiovascular comorbidities | BMI BSA | ABSI BRI WC | WHtR |
Haberka et al. [40] | 61.8 ± 8 | 255 (65.2%) | Association between obesity, fat depots, and carotid artery stenosis in patients with high cardiovascular risk | Scheduled for elective coronary angiography | Heart failure, severe primary heart valve disease or any other extracardiac chronic disease causing at least 10% unintentional weight loss (prior 3 months), secondary causes of obesity or medical intervention aimed at weight loss, neck or abdomen surgery, neck radiotherapy, a very poor carotid artery image quality, and confirmed diagnosis of a genetic predisposition for CV diseases | BMI | Ultrasound WC | Ultrasound |
Study | Carotid Plaque | Conclusion | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Evaluation Method | Definition | Grade | Symptomatic | ||
Bogousslavsky et al. [5] | Angiography US doppler | Defined on radiological clinic grounds and confirmed pathologically in patients who underwent endarterectomy | Determined | Symptomatic (157 patients) Asymptomatic (320 patients) | Obesity was significantly more frequent in patients with internal artery occlusion or stenosis than in controls |
Lakka et al. [6] | Ultrasound | Plaque height was calculated as the average of the differences between the maximal and minimal IMT of the right and left common carotid artery and was used as an indicator of how steeply atherosclerotic lesions protruded into the lumen | NA | Asymptomatic | Abdominal obesity, as indicated by high WHR and by high WC, is associated with accelerated progression of carotid atherosclerosis independent of overall obesity and other risk factors in middle-aged men with no prior atherosclerotic diseases |
Hunt et al. [7] | US doppler | Focal widening of the IMT relative to the adjacent wall segment, measuring at least 1.5 mm in thickness | NA | Symptomatic and asymptomatic | The prevalence of carotid artery plaque increased with WC and decreased with BMI |
Hegazi et al. [8] | Ultrasound | Plaque was defined as a distinct area of hyperechogenicity and/or protrusion into the lumen of the vessel with at least 50% greater thickness than the surrounding area | Plaque was defined as a distinct area of hyperechogenicity and/or protrusion into the lumen of the vessel with at least 50% greater thickness than the surrounding. For each segment, the degree of plaque was graded as follows: 0 = no plaque, 1 = 1 small plaque. <30% of vessel diameter, 2 = 1 medium plaque between 30% of vessel diameter or multiple small plaques, and 3 = 1 large plaque >50% of the vessel diameter or multiple plaques with at least 1 medium plaque. The grades were summed across the right and left carotid arteries to create an overall measure of the extent of focal plaque | Asymptomatic | Measures of adiposity were not significantly different in patients with higher plaques score |
Czernichow et al. [9] | Ultrasound | Localized eco structures encroaching upon the vessel lumen for which the distance between the media-adventitia internal side of lesion was >1 mm | NA | NA | No association was found between the presence of carotid plaques and body composition |
Hadjiev et al. [10] | Duplex scanning was employed | NA | Classification of carotid stenosis according to NASCET | Asymptomatic | Obesity was not associated with asymptomatic carotid stenosis of 50% or greater |
De Souza et al. [11] | Ultrasound | Distinct area of hyperechogenicity and/or a focal protrusion of the vessel wall into the lumen | NA | Symptomatic (11 patients) Asymptomatic (133 patients) | The prevalence of carotid artery plaque was significantly associated with obesity |
Montalcini et al. [12] | US doppler | Was defined as an echogenic focal structure encroaching the vessel lumen with a distinct area 50% greater than the intima-media thickness of neighboring sites. Stenosis was defined as a peak systolic velocity >120 cm/s, and occlusion was defined as the absence of a Doppler signal | NA | Asymptomatic | BMI was not associated with carotid atherosclerosis Women with metabolic syndrome who were overweight or obese had approximately three times higher adjusted odds of having carotid atherosclerosis |
Lear et al. [3] | Ultrasound | Focal plaques were identified as wall thickness that was increased compared with the surrounding IMT | NA | Asymptomatic | There were no differences in BMI, total fat mass, percent body fat, total abdominal adipose tissue, and SAT in those with versus without carotid plaques. In those with plaques, VAT was a significant, independent predictor of plaque area after adjusting for age, sex, ethnicity, education, household income, family history of CVD, smoking, and percent body fat |
Park et al. [13] | Magnetic resonance | Degree of luminal narrowing of ≥ 50% | NA | Symptomatic | None of the metabolic syndrome components were shown to be associated with extracranial internal carotid artery stenosis |
Irace et al. [14] | US doppler | Localized lesion encroaching the lumen of thickness at least 1.3 mm, no spectral broadening or only in the deceleration phase of systole and systolic peak velocity less than 120 cm/s. Stenosis was defined as spectral broadening throughout systole and/or peak flow velocity of at least 120 cm/s | NA | NA | Overweight and obesity, however, do not independently associate with carotid atherosclerosis |
Yu et al. [15] | Ultrasound | Plaque was defined as a focal wall thickening of at least 1.5 mm | The degree of plaque at the six segments was graded according to the following criteria: grade 0, no observable plaque, grade 1, one small plaque < 30% of vessel diameter, grade 2, one medium plaque between 30% and 50% of the vessel diameter or multiple small number plaques, and grade 3, one large plaque > 50% vessel diameter or multiple plaques with at least one medium plaque | Asymptomatic | A high WHR was independently associated with the presence of plaque |
Terzis et al. [16] | Ultrasound | Plaque was defined as a focal structure encroaching into the arterial lumen of at least 0.5 mm or 50% of the surrounding IMT value, or a thickness of 1.5 mm as measured from the media-adventitia interface to the intima-lumen interface | NA | Asymptomatic | The presence of atheromatous plaques was independently associated with BMI |
Kadoglou et al. [17] | US doppler | Localized thickening of the vessel wall of more than 2.5 mm | Classification of carotid stenosis according to the recommendations of the Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound | Symptomatic (35 patients) Asymptomatic (51 patients) | Increased fat mass correlated with carotid plaque vulnerability, as expressed by the gray scale median score |
Solomon et al. [18] | Ultrasound | Focal structure that encroaches into the arterial lumen of a least 0.5 mm or 50% of the surrounding intima-media thickness value or demonstrates a thickness of >1.5 mm as measured from the media-adventitia interface to the intima-lumen interface | NA | NA | WHR was significantly related to carotid artery plaque in African Caucasian women, whereas none of the obesity measures were associated with carotid artery plaque in black women |
Rodríguez-Flores et al. [19] | Histopathological study | Classification of atherosclerosis lesions according to the American Heart Association | NA | NA | BMI did not independently predict the risk of development of advanced lesions |
Maksimovic et al. [20] | Ultrasound | NA | Classification of carotid stenosis according to NASCET | Symptomatic | Patients with and without abdominal obesity did not significantly differ, either in the degree of carotid stenosis or in the degree of its clinical manifestation |
Galarza-Delgado et al. [21] | Ultrasound | Focal structure that invades the lumen of the artery by at least 0.5 mm or 50% of the value of intima-media thickness, or when the thickness is equal to or greater than 1.5 mm when measured from the adventitia-media interphase to the intima-arterial lumen interphase | NA | NA | Presence of plaque was associated with abdominal circumference |
Cuspidi et al. [22] | Ultrasound | NA | NA | Asymptomatic | No association was found between abdominal obesity and carotid plaque |
Chiquete et al. [23] | US doppler | NA | Classification of carotid stenosis according to NASCET | Symptomatic (30 patients) Asymptomatic (503 patients) | There was no association between obesity and carotid stenosis ≥ 50% or between obesity and symptomatic carotid stenosis |
Irie et al. [24] | Ultrasound | Focal structure encroaching into the arterial lumen or demonstrating a thickness >1.0 mm as measured from the media–adventitia interface to the intra-lumen interface | NA | Asymptomatic | The presence of echolucent carotid plaques with low gray-scale median values was related to high BMI |
Yan et al. [25] | US doppler | Focal encroachment of internal carotid artery walls on either side | NA | Asymptomatic | There was no significant association between abdominal obesity or overweight/obesity with carotid plaques |
Yuan et al. [26] | CT scan | Calcium mass score | NA | NA | No association was found between BMI, WC, and VAT, SAT determined on CT scan and carotid calcification |
Pan et al. [27] | Ultrasound | NA | NA | NA | In females, the prevalence of carotid atherosclerosis was significantly higher in obese than in the control group |
Radmard et al. [28] | Ultrasound | Localized thickening of >1.2 mm, not involving the whole circumference of the artery | NA | NA | Subjects with the highest amount of VAT were more prone to have more than one carotid plaque in comparison with participants showing the highest values of SAT or other conventional anthropometric indices |
Sandfort et al. [29] | Magnetic resonance | NA | Total wall volume measurements | NA | Obesity was associated with the progression of carotid atherosclerosis in a low- to moderate-risk population treated with optimal statin therapy |
Mitevska et al. [30] | US doppler | Detection of an IMT > 1.3 mm or a focal structure emerging from the wall of at least 0.5 mm or 50% of the surrounding IMT value | Carotid stenosis greater than 60% was considered significant | Asymptomatic | Multivariate analysis showed that obesity was not an independent predictor for the presence of carotid plaques |
Higuchi et al. [31] | US doppler | NA | Stenosis was regarded as significant if stenosis rate ≥70 | Asymptomatic | Visceral fat ≥ 100 cm2 was independently associated with cervical plaque. BMI and WHR were not |
Mancusi et al. [32] | Ultrasound | IMT ≥ 1.5 mm | NA | Asymptomatic | Obesity was associated with a modestly increased prevalence of carotid plaques |
Nishizawa et al. [33] | Autopsy | The largest atheroma plaque in the carotid artery was determined to calculate the stenosis index | The stenosis index was calculated by subtracting the lumen area from the outer area, dividing the difference by the outer area, and multiplying the result by 100 | NA | Visceral fat was not associated with carotid artery stenosis index |
Omisore et al. [34] | Ultrasound | Plaque was defined as focal thickening of at least 50% greater than that of the surrounding vessel wall, with a minimum thickness of at least 1.5 mm | NA | NA | Carotid plaques were associated with obesity |
Imahori et al. [35] | Ultrasound | Localized protrusion of the vessel wall into the lumen of at least 50% compared with the adjacent intima-media thickness | NA | NA | BMI, WC, and WHtR were not associated with the presence of carotid plaques. The main measure of central obesity (WHR) showed the strongest and most consistent association with plaque presence and with plaque area |
Laugesen et al. [36] | Magnetic resonance | NA | Carotid artery plaque burden was measured as maximum wall thickness derived from the lumen area and total vessel area outlines, maximum wall area, and maximum normalized wall index | Asymptomatic | Obesity was associated with increased carotid plaque necrotic core volume and calcification |
Yoshida et al. [37] | Ultrasound | Localized elevated lesions with a maximum thickness of more than 1 mm | NA | NA | Visceral adiposity is an independent predictor of atherosclerosis |
Scicali et al. [38] | Ultrasound | IMT greater than 1.5 mm | NA | Asymptomatic | The presence of carotid plaque was associated with high WHR |
Rovella et al. [4] | Histology | Collected at carotid endarterectomy | NA | Symptomatic (265 patients) Asymptomatic (125 patients) | Obesity is an independent risk factor for carotid plaque destabilization |
Geraci et al. [39] | US doppler | Focal structure encroaching into the arterial lumen of at least 0.5 mm or 50% of the surrounding carotid IMT value or carotid IMT > 1.5 mm | NA | Asymptomatic | ABSI was the only anthropometric adiposity index independently associated with the presence of carotid atherosclerotic plaque |
Haberka et al. [40] | US doppler | Presence of plaques in the common carotid artery, bulb, and internal carotid artery | Classification of carotid stenosis according to NASCET | NA | None of the obesity measurements revealed an association with carotid atherosclerosis severity |
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Ferreira, J.; Cunha, P.; Carneiro, A.; Vila, I.; Cunha, C.; Silva, C.; Longatto-Filho, A.; Mesquita, A.; Cotter, J.; Correia-Neves, M.; et al. Is Obesity a Risk Factor for Carotid Atherosclerotic Disease?—Opportunistic Review. J. Cardiovasc. Dev. Dis. 2022, 9, 162. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd9050162
Ferreira J, Cunha P, Carneiro A, Vila I, Cunha C, Silva C, Longatto-Filho A, Mesquita A, Cotter J, Correia-Neves M, et al. Is Obesity a Risk Factor for Carotid Atherosclerotic Disease?—Opportunistic Review. Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease. 2022; 9(5):162. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd9050162
Chicago/Turabian StyleFerreira, Joana, Pedro Cunha, Alexandre Carneiro, Isabel Vila, Cristina Cunha, Cristina Silva, Adhemar Longatto-Filho, Amílcar Mesquita, Jorge Cotter, Margarida Correia-Neves, and et al. 2022. "Is Obesity a Risk Factor for Carotid Atherosclerotic Disease?—Opportunistic Review" Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease 9, no. 5: 162. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd9050162
APA StyleFerreira, J., Cunha, P., Carneiro, A., Vila, I., Cunha, C., Silva, C., Longatto-Filho, A., Mesquita, A., Cotter, J., Correia-Neves, M., & Mansilha, A. (2022). Is Obesity a Risk Factor for Carotid Atherosclerotic Disease?—Opportunistic Review. Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease, 9(5), 162. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd9050162