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SLE and Cardiovascular Disease Mario J. Garcia, MD, FACC, FACP Chief, Division of Cardiology Professor of Medicine and Radiology Lupus and the Heart • SLE is a chronic, inflammatory disease with circulating Autoantibodies (“anti-self”); activated T cells (tissue autoimmunity); immune complexes (AntigenAntibody) and inflammatory Cytokines (cell messenger proteins) • Lupus Therapy over the last 4 decades has converted a rapidly fatal disease into a chronic condition Cardiac Involvement in Lupus All “layers” of the heart can be involved: 1) Pericardium 2) Myocardium 3) Valves 4) Electrical System 5) Coronary Vessels Pericarditis • • • • • Inflammation of the Pericardium occurs in 11-54% of Lupus patients Often occurs at Onset or with Relapses Pericarditis is the most characteristic feature and is one of the ACR/ARA Classification Criteria for Lupus “Sharp” chest pain, fever Treated with NSAIDs or Steroids Myocarditis • • Inflammation (“Myocarditis”) occurs in 7-10% of cases (and is treated with Steroids) Can lead to Heart Failure Valvular Disease • • • Inflammatory lesions usually on Mitral or Aortic Valves (both active and healed) “Verrucous” or Libman-Sacks lesions characteristic but not usual Valve Leaking or Stroke Heart Block • • Conduction “Block” rare in adults Seen in 2% of children born to mothers with Anti-Ro/SSA positive Lupus Coronary Disease • • • • Coronary Arteries carry blood supply the working muscle of the heart Coronary Artery Disease in 6-10%; Lupus patients have a 4-8 fold increased risk Smaller vessel inflammation (vasculitis)-usually in younger patients with active SLE Larger vessel inflammation (atherosclerosis)-usually in older patients with long-standing SLE Calcification Lipid Cor Inflammation Thrombus Coronary Calcium Score Normal Moderate Calcification Severe Calcification Roman; NEJM; 2003 Coronary CTA Stress Testing Catheterization Coronary Bypass and Stents Carotid Ultrasound Carotid Ultrasound Lumen IMT Lumen Stenosis Asanuma; NEJM; Dec 18, 2003 T able 1 An Ounce of Prevention… Accelerated atherosclerosis in systemic lupus erythematosus: implications for patient management. S almon, J ane; R oman, Mary C urrent Opinion in R heumatology. 13(5):341-344, S eptember 2001. Table 1 . S trategies to reduce atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in patients with systemic lupus erythematosusAS C VD, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; B P , blood pressure; L DL , low-density lipoprotein. Diet Modification: Healthy Choices • • • • • • • Fruits and Vegetables Whole Grain and High Fiber Oily (cold water) fish 2 x / week Alcoholic drink not > 1/day Sodium (Na+) < 2.3 gram/day Saturated Fat < 10% of total calories Limit Trans-Fat: Baked Goods and Fried Foods Cardiac (Exercise) Rehab • Prevents 23 deaths per 1000 patients • Safety: Mortality 1 / 784,000 pt-hours • Cost: $1200 / QOL-year (comparable to Left main surgery!) By comparison, Dialysis costs $40,000 / QOL-yr • Usually 3 x /week for 12-16 weeks Smoking Cessation • Smokers have 3 x the risk of MI of non-smokers • Cessation prevents 70 deaths per 1000 patients x 1 year Medical Treatment • • • • • A—Aspirin and ACE Inhibitors B—Beta Blockers and Blood Pressure C—Cholesterol / Cigarettes / Clopidogrel D—Diet (for Weight and Diabetes) E—Exercise and Education Conti, CR Clin. Cardiology 2007 LDL Cholesterol Goals Risk Factor LDL Goal 10 year event rate CHD or Equivalent < 100 mg/dl > 20% 2 or more Risk Factors < 130 mg/dl 10-20% 0-1 Risk Factors <160 mg/dl < 10% Other Cholesterol Goals • “Lupus” Lipid profile often has low HDL (“good” cholesterol), high Triglycerides and high Lp(a) (a lipoprotein that ties into the clotting cascade) • Lp(a) may be modifiable with exercise and Niacin Treating Cholesterol • High Total and LDL Cholest Statins (zocor, lipitor, crestor) • High Trig and Low HDL Cholest Fibrates (lopid, tricor) • High LDL and Trig and low HDL Cholest Niacin (niaspan) • High Triglycerides prescript. Fish oil (Omega 3 FAs) (lovaza)