New research reveals a new, menopause-specific indicator of heart disease risk—and suggests possible ways to reduce it.
The findings also suggest a target for future studies on the impact of hormone replacement therapy in improving cardiovascular health.
A higher volume of a type of fat that surrounds the heart is significantly associated with a greater risk of heart disease in women after menopause and women with lower levels of estrogen at midlife, the research shows.
“For the first time, we’ve pinpointed the type of heart fat, linked it to a risk factor for heart disease, and shown that menopausal status and estrogen levels are critical modifying factors of its associated risk in women,” says Samar R. El Khoudary, assistant professor of epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh and lead author of the study in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
There are two types of fat surrounding the heart:
- Epicardial fat, the fat that directly covers the heart tissue (the myocardium) and is located between the outside of the heart and the pericardium (the membrane that encases the heart). It is the energy source for the heart.
- Paracardial fat, which is outside the pericardium, anterior to the epicardial fat. There are no known heart-protective functions of this fat.
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For the study, researchers evaluated clinical data, including blood samples and heart CT scans, on 478 women from Pittsburgh and Chicago enrolled in the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN). The women were in varying stages of menopause, averaged 51 years old, and were not on hormone replacement therapy.
In a previous study, the team showed that a greater volume of paracardial fat, but not epicardial fat, after menopause is explained by a decline in the sex hormone estradiol—the most potent estrogen—in midlife women. The higher volume of epicardial fat was tied to other risk factors, such as obesity.
In the new study, the researchers built on those findings to discover that not only is a greater paracardial fat volume specific to menopause, but—in postmenopausal women and women with lower levels of estradiol—it’s also associated with a greater risk of coronary artery calcification, an early sign of heart disease that is measured with a heart CT scan.
In the women studied, an increase in paracardial fat volume from the 25th percentile to the 75th percentile (corresponding to 60 percent increase) was associated with a 160 percent higher risk of coronary artery calcification and a 45 percent increase in the extent of coronary artery calcification in postmenopausal women compared with pre- or early-menopausal women.
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“Clearly, epicardial and paracardial fat are distinct types of heart fat that are found to be greater in postmenopausal women for different reasons with different effects on heart disease risk—and thus should be evaluated separately when searching for ways to help women avoid heart disease,” El Khoudary says.
A recent analysis of previous research found that heart fat volumes could be reduced successfully with dieting and bariatric surgery. Given the uncertainty about the cardio-protective effects of hormone replacement therapy, as well as the lack of research on the impact of such therapy on heart fat volumes, El Khoudary is planning a study to evaluate hormone replacement therapy on heart fat accumulation, paying particular attention to the types of heart fat.
Other researchers from the University of Pittsburgh, the Allegheny Health Network, Rush University Medical Center, the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute, and the University of Minnesota Medical School are coauthors of the study. The National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association supported the work.
Source: University of Pittsburgh