Conjugated bile acids are elevated in severe calcific aortic valve stenosis
Hannah Zhang, Negar Atefi, Arun Surendran, Jun Han, David R. Goodlett, Davinder S. Jassal, Ashish Shah, Amir Ravandi

TL;DR
This study finds that conjugated bile acids are higher in severe aortic valve stenosis, suggesting a link between bile acid metabolism and heart valve disease.
Contribution
The study identifies specific elevated bile acids in severe calcific aortic valve stenosis and links them to disease severity.
Findings
Five bile acids are significantly elevated in moderate and severe aortic stenosis.
Conjugated primary and secondary bile acids are increased in stenotic valves compared to mild cases.
Bile acid composition can distinguish valve severity using K-means clustering.
Abstract
Calcific aortic valve (AV) stenosis (CAVS) is a disease associated with significant morbidity and mortality in the aging population. Recently, bile acids have been shown to play a significant role in many disease processes, and untargeted metabolomic analyses of CAVS patient valves have shown a disrupted bile acid pathway. We aimed to understand the changes in human valvular bile acids in relation to CAVS severity. A total of 100 human AVs were collected from patients undergoing AV replacement surgery. Bile acids were quantified by ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography coupled to MS/MS. Patients with mild aortic stenosis (AS) showed a distinct valvular bile acid composition compared with moderate and severe AS groups, with five bile acids being significantly elevated in patients with moderate and severe AS. These included norcholic, nordeoxycholic, glycodeoxycholic, glycocholic,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac Valve Diseases and Treatments · Gastroesophageal reflux and treatments · Infective Endocarditis Diagnosis and Management
