Right atrium size in the general population

  • Karsten Keller
  • Christoph Sinning
  • Andreas Schulz
  • Claus Jünger
  • Volker H Schmitt
  • Omar Hahad
  • Tanja Zeller
  • Manfred Beutel
  • Norbert Pfeiffer
  • Konstantin Strauch
  • Stefan Blankenberg
  • Karl J Lackner
  • Jürgen H Prochaska
  • Eberhard Schulz
  • Thomas Münzel (Shared last author)
  • Philipp S Wild (Shared last author)

Related Research units

Abstract

Echocardiography is the most common routine cardiac imaging method. Nevertheless, only few data about sex-specific reference limits for right atrium (RA) dimensions are available. Transthoracic echocardiographic RA measurements were studied in 9511 participants of the Gutenberg-Health-Study. A reference sample of 1942 cardiovascular healthy subjects without chronic obstructive pulmonary disease was defined. We assessed RA dimensions and sex-specific reference limits were defined using the 95th percentile of the reference sample. Results showed sex-specific differences with larger RA dimensions in men that were attenuated by standardization for body-height. RA-volume was 20.2 ml/m in women (5th-95th: 12.7-30.4 ml/m) and 26.1 ml/m in men (5th-95th: 16.0-40.5 ml/m). Multivariable regressions identified body-mass-index (BMI), coronary artery disease (CAD), chronic heart failure (CHF) and atrial fibrillation (AF) as independent key correlates of RA-volume in both sexes. All-cause mortality after median follow-up-period of 10.7 (9.81/11.6) years was higher in individuals who had RA volume/height outside the 95% reference limit (HR 1.70 [95%CI 1.29-2.23], P = 0.00014)). Based on a large community-based sample, we present sex-specific reference-values for RA dimensions normalized for height. RA-volume varies with BMI, CHF, CAD and AF in both sexes. Individuals with RA-volume outside the reference limit had a 1.7-fold higher mortality than those within reference limits.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number22523
ISSN2045-2322
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18.11.2021
PubMed 34795353