Literature DB >> 21747281

Oxidative stress and cardiomyocyte necrosis with elevated serum troponins: pathophysiologic mechanisms.

Antwon D Robinson1, Kodangudi B Ramanathan, Jesse E McGee, Kevin P Newman, Karl T Weber.   

Abstract

The progressive nature of heart failure is linked to multiple factors, including an ongoing loss of cardiomyocytes and necrosis. Necrotic cardiomyocytes leave behind several footprints: the spillage of their contents leading to elevations in serum troponins; and morphologic evidence of tissue repair with scarring. The pathophysiologic origins of cardiomyocyte necrosis relates to neurohormonal activation, including the adrenergic nervous system. Catecholamine-initiated excessive intracellular Ca accumulation and mitochondria Ca overloading in particular initiate a mitochondriocentric signal-transducer-effector pathway to necrosis and which includes the induction of oxidative stress and opening of their inner membrane permeability transition pore. Hypokalemia, ionized hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia, where consequent elevations in parathyroid hormone further account for excessive intracellular Ca accumulation, hypozincemia and hyposelenemia each compromise metalloenzyme-based antioxidant defenses. The necrotic loss of cardiomyocytes and adverse structural remodeling of myocardium is related to the central role played by a mitochondriocentric pathway initiated by neurohormonal activation.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21747281     DOI: 10.1097/MAJ.0b013e3182231ee3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Med Sci        ISSN: 0002-9629            Impact factor:   2.378


  10 in total

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2.  Intracellular calcium overloading and oxidative stress in cardiomyocyte necrosis via a mitochondriocentric signal-transducer-effector pathway.

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Review 4.  Brain temperature and its fundamental properties: a review for clinical neuroscientists.

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Review 5.  The emerging neuroprotective role of mitochondrial uncoupling protein-2 in traumatic brain injury.

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7.  Norepinephrine Leads to More Cardiopulmonary Toxicities than Epinephrine by Catecholamine Overdose in Rats.

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10.  Cardiovascular diseases in older patients with osteoporotic hip fracture: prevalence, disturbances in mineral and bone metabolism, and bidirectional links.

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  10 in total

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