Renal sinus fat volume on computed tomography in middle-aged patients at risk for cardiovascular disease and its association with coronary artery calcification

2016 
Abstract Objective Renal sinus fat (RSF) behaves as one of the perivascular fats, however RSF volume (RSFV) is considerably affected by visceral adipose tissue volume (VTAV). The ratio of RSFV to VATV (RSFV/VATV ratio) can be an index of regional perivascular fat accumulation corrected for the influence of VATV. The aim of this study was to investigate the relation between RSFV/VATV ratio and coronary artery calcium (CAC) in patients with suspected coronary artery disease. Methods One hundred and eighty-nine patients (mean age 66.7 ± 10.2; 72% men) underwent ECG-gated cardiac computed tomography (CT) and unenhanced abdominal CT. CAC score (CACS) was assessed using axial CT images. RSFV was measured by partially manipulated segmentation of the right kidney. VATV was automatically quantified in the upper abdomen. Logistic and correlation analyses were performed to examine the correlations between CAC, RSFV/VATV ratio, and risk factors of cardiovascular diseases in total and subgroups classified by the patients' age. Results Log-transformed RSFV/VATV ratio was associated with CAC presence in 112 middle-aged patients less than 69 years of age as well as total. This association remained significant after multivariate adjustment only in the middle-aged patients (OR 15.9, 95% CI 1.15–218.8). In total, RSFV/VATV ratio ( r  = 0.228, p = 0.002) and age ( r  = 0.316, p  r  = 0.418, p  Conclusions We demonstrated that RSFV/VATV could be an independent risk indicator of CAC in the middle-aged patients.
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