| Literature DB >> 19364331 |
Omar Asghar1, Ahmed Al-Sunni, Kaivan Khavandi, Ali Khavandi, Sarah Withers, Adam Greenstein, Anthony M Heagerty, Rayaz A Malik.
Abstract
Diabetic cardiomyopathy is a distinct primary disease process, independent of coronary artery disease, which leads to heart failure in diabetic patients. Epidemiological and clinical trial data have confirmed the greater incidence and prevalence of heart failure in diabetes. Novel echocardiographic and MR (magnetic resonance) techniques have enabled a more accurate means of phenotyping diabetic cardiomyopathy. Experimental models of diabetes have provided a range of novel molecular targets for this condition, but none have been substantiated in humans. Similarly, although ultrastructural pathology of the microvessels and cardiomyocytes is well described in animal models, studies in humans are small and limited to light microscopy. With regard to treatment, recent data with thiazolidinediones has generated much controversy in terms of the cardiac safety of both these and other drugs currently in use and under development. Clinical trials are urgently required to establish the efficacy of currently available agents for heart failure, as well as novel therapies in patients specifically with diabetic cardiomyopathy.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19364331 PMCID: PMC2782307 DOI: 10.1042/CS20080500
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Sci (Lond) ISSN: 0143-5221 Impact factor: 6.124
Figure 1Summary of interactions between the myocardial and vascular changes present in diabetic hearts and their contribution to diabetic cardiomyopathy and heart failure
Ang II R1, AT1; IGF-1, insulin-like growth factor-1.
Summary of the major structural changes in experimental and human diabetic cardiomyopathy
↑ indicates increase; ↓ indicates decrease; = indicates no difference. BB, BioBreeding; ZDF, Zucker diabetic fatty.
| Diabetes type | Model | Cardiac mass | Cardiomyocyte diameter | Cardiomyocyte loss | Mitochondria | SR | Apoptosis | Intramyocardial lipid | Fibrosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type 1 diabetes | STZ rat | =[ | ↓[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | =[ |
| Alloxan rat | =[ | ↑[ | =[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ||||
| BB Wistar rat | ↓[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | |||
| Type 2 diabetes | KK mice | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ||||
| ZDF rat | =but after insulin↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | |||||
| ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | ↑[ | =[ | =[ | ||||
| Type 1 and 2 diabetes | Humans | ↑[ | ↑[ | =?[ | =?[ | =?[ | ↑[ | =?[ | =[ |
Figure 2Electronmicrograph of a myocardial capillary from a diabetic patient, demonstrating luminal occlusion with basement membrane thickening
Summary of the major microvascular changes in experimental and human diabetic cardiomyopathy
BB, BioBreeding; ZDF, Zucker diabetic fatty.
| Diabetes type | Model | Microvascular changes |
|---|---|---|
| Type 1 diabetes | STZ rat | Decreased capillary diameter and density [ |
| Narrow capillary lumen with endothelial swelling [ | ||
| Basement membrane thickening [ | ||
| Alloxan rat | Decreased capillary lumen [ | |
| Endothelial swelling [ | ||
| Basement membrane thickening [ | ||
| BB Wistar rat | No changes [ | |
| Type 2 diabetes | KK mice | No changes [ |
| ZDF | Perivascular fibrosis [ | |
| Basement membrane thickening [ | ||
| Type 1 and 2 diabetes | Humans | Basement membrane thickening [ |