Literature DB >> 23298496

Metabolic syndrome and chronic simvastatin therapy enhanced human cardiomyocyte stress before and after ischemia-reperfusion in cardio-pulmonary bypass patients.

G Corsetti1, E Pasini, M Ferrari-Vivaldi, C Romano, F Bonomini, G Tasca, F S Dioguardi, R Rezzani, D Assanelli.   

Abstract

Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a set of metabolic alterations including high levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL), which increase the risk of cardiomyopathy often leading to surgery. Despite inducing myopathy, statins are widely used to lower LDL. Cardiopulmonary bypass (Cpb) causes oxidative stress and metabolic injury, altering mitochondrial expression (Grp75) and endoplasmic reticulum (Grp78) chaperones, apoptotic enzymes (Bcl2 family) and increasing cardiomyocyte lipid/lipofuscin storage. We believe that cardiomyocytes from patients with MetS may be more sensitive to surgical stress, in particular after simvastatin therapy (MetS+Stat). The study group included ten patients with MetS, ten patients with Mets+Stat and ten healthy subjects. Myocardial biopsies were obtained both before and after-Cpb. Grp75, Grp78, Bax, Bcl2, lipids, lipofuscin and fibrosis were evaluated by immuno/histochemistry. MetS cardiomyocytes had higher Grp75, Bax, fibrosis and lipofuscin. MetS+Stat had lower Grp75 and higher Grp78 expressions, high Bax, fewer fibrosis and higher lipofuscin content. Cpb did not vary the fibrosis and lipids/lipofuscin content, although it influenced the chaperones and Bax expression in all groups. These changes were more profound in patients with MetS and even more so in patients with MetS+Stat. The results suggest that MetS and MetS+Stat cardiomyocytes were more highly stressed after-Cpb. Interestingly, simvastatin caused high stress even before-Cpb.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23298496     DOI: 10.1177/039463201202500423

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Immunopathol Pharmacol        ISSN: 0394-6320            Impact factor:   3.219


  1 in total

1.  Dietary supplementation with essential amino acids boosts the beneficial effects of rosuvastatin on mouse kidney.

Authors:  Giovanni Corsetti; Giuseppe D'Antona; Chiara Ruocco; Alessandra Stacchiotti; Claudia Romano; Laura Tedesco; Francesco Dioguardi; Rita Rezzani; Enzo Nisoli
Journal:  Amino Acids       Date:  2014-06-13       Impact factor: 3.520

  1 in total

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