Literature DB >> 17944024

Coronary artery disease progression is associated with increased resistance of hearts and myocytes to cardiac insults.

Anabelle Chase1, Christopher L Jackson, Gianni L Angelini, M-Saadeh Suleiman.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether coronary artery disease alters vulnerability of hearts and myocytes to cardiac insults. To address this issue, we developed an experimental model of coronary artery disease.
DESIGN: Prospective, experimental study.
SETTING: University experimental research laboratories.
SUBJECTS: Apolipoprotein E knockout mice.
INTERVENTIONS: Male apolipoprotein E knockout mice, aged 8 wks, were fed either a normal or high-fat diet.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: High-fat feeding for 24 wks induced atherosclerosis in the coronary arteries, was associated with myocardial infarction, and produced evidence of myocardial metabolic anaerobic stress when compared with apolipoprotein E knockout mice fed normal diet. Myocytes and hearts from both groups had similar morphometric and hemodynamic characteristics. During global ischemia, hearts with coronary disease had shorter time to enter into rigor and developed greater ischemic contracture. They were markedly more resistant to reperfusion injury than nondiseased hearts, as shown by cardiac function, release of cardiac enzymes, and metabolic preservation. An increase in prosurvival signaling was detected in diseased hearts, as shown by a higher ratio of phospho-Akt/total Akt than in nondiseased hearts. Myocytes from diseased heart exposed to metabolic inhibition and reperfusion had fewer arrhythmias than myocytes from nondiseased heart. These differences are not due to high-fat feeding, as hearts of wild-type mice fed this diet were more, not less, vulnerable to cardiac insults.
CONCLUSION: This work suggests that chronic partial ischemia associated with progression of coronary artery disease preconditions myocytes and hearts against subsequent acute cardiac insults. (C) 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17944024     DOI: 10.1097/01.ccm.0000282085.63409.fb

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Med        ISSN: 0090-3493            Impact factor:   7.598


  8 in total

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2.  Left ventricular dysfunction with reduced functional cardiac reserve in diabetic and non-diabetic LDL-receptor deficient apolipoprotein B100-only mice.

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3.  Hearts from mice fed a non-obesogenic high-fat diet exhibit changes in their oxidative state, calcium and mitochondria in parallel with increased susceptibility to reperfusion injury.

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7.  Loss of PDZK1 causes coronary artery occlusion and myocardial infarction in Paigen diet-fed apolipoprotein E deficient mice.

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8.  The effect of disease on human cardiac protein expression profiles in paired samples from right and left ventricles.

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  8 in total

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