Abstract

Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have an increased risk of ischemic heart disease. Endothelial dysfunction may play a role in the onset of cardiovascular event. Previous studies showed an impaired endothelial function (measured by flow-mediated dilation, FMD) in COPD patients compared to healthy subjects. To the best of our knowledge no study has compared FMD in COPD and in cardiac (coronary artery disease, CAD) patients. We aimed to assess FMD in healthy subjects, COPD, CAD, and COPD + CAD. The main result is that FMD in COPD is reduced and is in an intermediate position between healthy subjects and CAD or COPD + CAD; this impairment can contribute to explain the higher prevalence of cardiovascular disease in COPD. The only determinant independently associated with FMD in all subjects is the physical activity level, irrespective of the traditional risk factors (i.e., smoke, dyslipidemia, hypertension).

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