Abstract

Background

Diabetes mellitus (DM) and its cardiovascular disease (CVD) complication are among the most frequent causes of death worldwide. However, the metabolites linking up diabetes and CVD are less understood. In this study, we aimed to evaluate serum acylcarnitines and amino acids in postmenopausal women suffering from diabetes with different severity of CVD and compared them with healthy controls.

Methods

Through a cross-sectional study, samples were collected from postmenopausal women without diabetes and CVD as controls (n = 20), patients with diabetes and without CVD (n = 16), diabetes with low risk of CVD (n = 11), and diabetes with a high risk of CVD (n = 21) referred for CT angiography for any reason. Metabolites were detected by a targeted approach using LC–MS/MS and metabolic -alterations were assessed by applying multivariate statistical analysis. The diagnostic ability of discovered metabolites based on multivariate statistical analysis was evaluated by ROC curve analysis.

Results

The study included women aged from 50–80 years with 5–30 years of menopause. The relative concentration of C14:1, C14:2, C16:1, C18:1, and C18:2OH acylcarnitines decreased and C18 acylcarnitine and serine increased in diabetic patients compared to control. Besides, C16:1 and C18:2OH acylcarnitines increased in high-risk CVD diabetic patients compared to no CVD risk diabetic patients.

Conclusion

Dysregulation of serum acylcarnitines and amino acids profile correlated with different CAC score ranges in diabetic postmenopausal women. (Ethic approval No: IR.TUMS.EMRI.REC.1399.062).

Details

Title
Circulating amino acids and acylcarnitines correlated with different CAC score ranges in diabetic postmenopausal women using LC–MS/MS based metabolomics approach
Author
Hosseinkhani, Shaghayegh; Salari, Pooneh; Bandarian, Fatemeh; Asadi, Mojgan; Shirani, Shapour; Najjar, Niloufar; Dehghanbanadaki, Hojat; Pasalar, Parvin; Razi, Farideh
Pages
1-9
Section
Research
Publication year
2022
Publication date
2022
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
14726823
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2704065052
Copyright
© 2022. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.