Chronic Infections and the Risk of Carotid Atherosclerosis

Author:

Kiechl Stefan1,Egger Georg1,Mayr Manuel1,Wiedermann Christian J.1,Bonora Enzo1,Oberhollenzer Friedrich1,Muggeo Michele1,Xu Qingbo1,Wick Georg1,Poewe Werner1,Willeit Johann1

Affiliation:

1. From the Departments of Neurology (S.K., W.P., J.W.) and Internal Medicine (C.J.W.), University Clinic Innsbruck, the Institute for Biomedical Aging Research, Austrian Academy of Science (M. Mayr, Q.X., G.W.), and the Institute of General and Experimental Pathology, University of Innsbruck (G.W.), Innsbruck, Austria; the Department of Internal Medicine, Bruneck Hospital, Bruneck (G.E., F.O.), and the Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, University of Verona, Verona (E.B., M. Muggeo), Italy;...

Abstract

Background —Chronic infections have been implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis, yet from an epidemiological perspective, this concept remains controversial. Methods and Results —The Bruneck Study is a prospective population-based survey on the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. In 826 men and women 40 to 79 years old (1990 baseline), 5-year changes in carotid atherosclerosis were thoroughly assessed by high-resolution duplex scanning. The presence of chronic respiratory, urinary tract, dental, and other infections was ascertained by standard diagnostic criteria. Chronic infections amplified the risk of atherosclerosis development in the carotid arteries. The association was most pronounced in subjects free of carotid atherosclerosis at baseline (age-/sex-adjusted odds ratio [95% CI] for any chronic infection versus none, 4.08 [2.42 to 6.85]; P <0.0001) and applied to all types of chronic (bacterial) infections. It remained independently significant after adjustment for classic vascular risk attributes and extended to low-risk individuals free of conventional risk factors. Among subjects with chronic infections, atherosclerosis risk was highest in those with a prominent inflammatory response. Markers of systemic inflammation, such as soluble adhesion molecules and circulating bacterial endotoxin, and levels of soluble human heat-shock protein 60 and antibodies to mycobacterial heat-shock protein 65 were elevated in subjects with chronic infections and predictive of an increased risk of atherosclerosis. Conclusions —The present study provides solid evidence for a role of common chronic infections in human atherogenesis. Induction of systemic inflammation and autoimmunity may be potential pathophysiological links.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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