Presence of carpal tunnel syndrome may indicate a high risk of developing cardiac amyloidosis, according to study from All of Us Research Program
2024-06-03
(Press-News.org)
Physician-scientists from the University of Alabama at Birmingham Marnix E. Heersink School of Medicine led a nationwide study to examine the role of carpal tunnel syndrome in predicting the risk of cardiac amyloidosis.
In their study published in the Mayo Clinic Proceedings, UAB researchers collaborated with researchers from Weill Cornell Medicine and Columbia University to show that carpal tunnel syndrome preceded the development of cardiac amyloidosis by 10-15 years and individuals with carpal tunnel syndrome were at a high risk of developing cardiac amyloidosis.
“Cardiac amyloidosis is an underdiagnosed condition that may be responsible for up to one in 10 cases of heart failure,”said Naman S. Shetty, M.D., a research fellow in the UAB Division of Cardiovascular Disease and the first author of this manuscript. “At the time of diagnosis, individuals with cardiac amyloidosis have developed severe heart failure and are at a high risk of death. Early identification of cardiac amyloidosis may allow the initiation of disease-modifying therapeutic agents that halt the progression of disease and delay the development of heart failure. Therefore, early identification of cardiac amyloidosis is essential to prevent the mortality and morbidity associated with the disease.”
Shetty and his team utilized nationwide data from the All of Us Research Program to study approximately 150,000 individuals across the United States. The study unveiled a significant association between carpal tunnel syndrome and the risk of developing heart failure and amyloidosis.
“We found that individuals with carpal tunnel syndrome exhibited a 13 percent higher risk of developing heart failure and a threefold higher risk of amyloidosis compared to those without carpal tunnel syndrome,” Shetty said. “Therefore, the findings of this study point toward carpal tunnel syndrome as a potential early indicator of cardiac amyloidosis.”
Shetty says the development of carpal tunnel syndrome before developing cardiac amyloidosis may be attributed to the disease process in amyloidosis. Amyloidosis is characterized by the destabilization of the transthyretin protein, which leads to the breakdown of this protein into fragments. The deposition of these protein fragments in various tissues leads to the manifestations of amyloidosis.
Shetty notes that the carpal tunnel is a tight space in the wrist and the deposition of even a small amount of protein fragments leads to the development of symptoms. However, a large amount of protein deposition in the heart is required for the alteration of the function of the heart and the development of cardiac symptoms. These differences may explain why carpal tunnel syndrome precedes cardiac amyloidosis by 10-15 years.
Pankaj Arora, M.D., the senior author of the manuscript and an associate professor in the UAB Division of Cardiovascular Disease, explains that cardiac amyloidosis is broadly classified as wild-type, meaning it has no identifiable genetic mutation, or hereditary, meaning it is caused by a genetic mutation in the TTR gene.
“The All of Us Research Program provided the unique opportunity to examine whether carrying a TTR mutation was associated with a higher risk of developing carpal tunnel syndrome,” Arora said. “The study found that carriers of a TTR mutation have a roughly 40 percent higher risk of developing carpal tunnel syndrome, with the risk increasing notably around the age of 50-60 years. Our previous work showed that the risk of heart failure in individuals carrying a TTR mutation increased at nearly 75 years of age. Putting these findings together, individuals with a genetic mutation for cardiac amyloidosis develop carpal tunnel syndrome about 10-15 years prior to the development of heart failure.”
Arora, who also serves as the director of the UAB Cardiogenomics Clinic, is routinely involved in caring for patients with hereditary cardiac amyloidosis.
“The findings of this study have several implications for the detection of cardiac amyloidosis,” Arora said. “Cardiac amyloidosis screening programs targeting individuals with CTS between the ages of 50 and 60 years may facilitate early identification of ATTR amyloidosis.”
Arora notes that genetic testing for TTR variants may prove to be a feasible strategy for screening. Considering that about 3 percent to 4 percent of Black individuals carry a genetic variant, implementation of genetic testing in individuals with carpal tunnel syndrome may allow early identification of carriers of genetic mutation and permit preventive strategies. These efforts may ultimately contribute to decreasing racial disparities in cardiovascular disease.
END
[Attachments] See images for this press release:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2024-06-03
East Hanover, NJ – June 3, 2024 – Nancy D. Chiaravalloti, PhD, has been awarded the 2024 Fred Foley Award for her contributions to significant advances in the understanding and treatment of memory deficits in multiple sclerosis (MS). Dr. Chiaravalloti is director of the Centers for Neuropsychology and Neuroscience and Traumatic Brain Injury Research and co-director of the Center for Multiple Sclerosis Research at Kessler Foundation. This prestigious accolade, established in 2016 by the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC), was presented on May 31 at the CMSC conference in Nashville, ...
2024-06-03
Collaborations across research disciplines can lead to unexpected breakthroughs and discoveries. Collaborations across species lead to unexpected evolutionary paths of mutual benefit.
For example, some plants have managed to recruit ant bodyguards. They produce sugary nectar on their leaves that attracts the ants, then these very territorial and aggressive ant mercenaries patrol “their” plant and sting or bite herbivores that try to eat it.
These relationships are well-documented in flowering plants, but they also occur in non-flowering ferns. This is weird news for researchers, as it has long been thought that ferns lack the ...
2024-06-03
Ziwei Zhu, Assistant Professor, Computer Science, and Jin Lee, Assistant Professor, Criminology, Law and Society, are set to receive funding for: “Data-Centric Social Bias Mitigation for Large Language Model-based Cyberharassment Detection.”
The researchers aim to address the critical challenge of algorithmic bias in Large Language Models (LLMs) used for cyberharassment detection.
They will focus on reducing unfair treatment against minority populations identified by gender, race, religion, sexual orientation, and disability.
Despite the ...
2024-06-03
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 3, 2024 — The latest issues of two American Psychiatric Association journals, The American Journal of Psychiatry and Psychiatric Services are now available online.
The June issue of The American Journal of Psychiatry features advances in understanding schizophrenia, ADHD, and autism spectrum disorder. Highlights include:
Long-Term Course of Remission and Recovery in Psychotic Disorders. (Lead author Sara Tramazzo is the featured guest on June’s AJP Audio podcast episode.)
The Genesis of Schizophrenia: An Origin Story
Recapitulation of Perturbed Striatal Gene Expression Dynamics of Donors’ ...
2024-06-03
Researchers who had been using Fitbit data to help predict surgical outcomes have a new method to more accurately gauge how patients may recover from spine surgery.
Using machine learning techniques developed at the AI for Health Institute at Washington University in St. Louis, Chenyang Lu, the Fullgraf Professor in the university’s McKelvey School of Engineering, collaborated with Jacob Greenberg, MD, assistant professor of neurosurgery at the School of Medicine, to develop a way to predict recovery more accurately from lumbar spine surgery.
The results published this month in the journal Proceedings of the ACM ...
2024-06-03
LA JOLLA, CA—Scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) have developed a new computational method for linking molecular marks on our DNA to gene activity. Their work may help researchers connect genes to the molecular "switches" that turn them on or off.
This research, published in Genome Biology, is an important step toward harnessing machine learning approaches to better understand links between gene expression and disease development.
"This research is about bringing a three-dimensional perspective to studying DNA modifications and their function in our genome," says LJI Associate Professor Ferhat Ay, Ph.D., who co-led the study with LJI ...
2024-06-03
There’s a hot new BEC in town that has nothing to do with bacon, egg, and cheese. You won’t find it at your local bodega, but in the coldest place in New York: the lab of Columbia physicist Sebastian Will, whose experimental group specializes in pushing atoms and molecules to temperatures just fractions of a degree above absolute zero.
Writing in Nature, the Will lab, supported by theoretical collaborator Tijs Karman at Radboud University in the Netherlands, has successfully created a unique quantum state of matter called a Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) out of molecules.
Their BEC, cooled ...
2024-06-03
By Shawn Ballard
The recent spike in food prices isn’t just bad news for your grocery bill. It also impacts the sugars used in biomanufacturing, which, by the way, isn’t quite as green as scientists and climate advocates expected. Surging prices and increasing urgency for genuinely sustainable manufacturing has pushed researchers to explore alternative feedstocks.
Feng Jiao, the Elvera and William R. Stuckenberg Professor in in the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis, developed a two-step process to convert carbon dioxide ...
2024-06-03
BOSTON—Widespread availability of telemedicine during the pandemic led to more equitable access to endocrinology care for patients with type 2 diabetes and heart disease, according to a study being presented Monday at ENDO 2024, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Boston, Mass.
Patients who benefited included those living in rural areas and in neighborhoods with lower socioeconomic status, according to the study.
While most adults with type 2 diabetes receive care in the primary care setting, adults who have both type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease ...
2024-06-03
Imagine you’re deep in the backcountry on a hiking trip, and you fall and rip a deep gash in your lower leg. You’re a two-day walk away from proper treatment. After you stop the bleeding, your concern becomes keeping the wound clean.
Now, imagine you had just the thing in your first aid kit—a spray-on bandage embedded with a mild painkiller and a disinfectant. A bandage meant to deliver relief, and degrade within 48 hours, giving you time to make it to the hospital.
That’s one reality that Whitney Blocher McTigue, an assistant professor ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Presence of carpal tunnel syndrome may indicate a high risk of developing cardiac amyloidosis, according to study from All of Us Research Program