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Cardiovascular highlights from non-cardiology journals
  1. Alistair C Lindsay, Editor

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General cardiology, heart failure, electrophysiology

Gut microbiota linked to coronary outcomes

There is a growing awareness in many fields of medicine that intestinal microbial organisms, collectively termed microbiota, play a crucial role in the global metabolism of their host. Recent animal studies have demonstrated mechanistic links between intestinal microbial metabolism of the choline moiety in dietary phosphatidylcholine (lecithin) and coronary artery disease through the production of a proatherosclerotic metabolite, trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO). The relevance of this connection in humans is unknown but was investigated in two linked studies.

In the first, 40 healthy volunteers were recruited and levels of plasma and urinary TMAO were measured after a phosphatidylcholine challenge (ingestion of two hard-boiled eggs and deuterium (d9)-labeled phosphatidylcholine) before and after the suppression of intestinal microbiota with oral broad-spectrum antibiotics. In the second study, 4007 adults who were undergoing elective coronary angiography were recruited and followed for 3 years with a comparison made between baseline fasting plasma TMAO levels and incident major adverse cardiovascular events (death, myocardial infarction, or stroke). The results demonstrated a highly significant correlation between TMAO levels and the risk of a primary outcome event and also that circulating TMAO was modifiable by antibiotic therapy. In the healthy volunteer study, time-dependent increases in levels of both TMAO as well as other choline metabolites, were detected after the phosphatidylcholine challenge. Plasma levels of TMAO …

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  • Provenance and peer review Commissioned; internally peer reviewed.