Literature DB >> 23542917

Cardiac function and lipid distribution in rats fed a high-fat diet: in vivo magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy.

Vijayasarathi Nagarajan1, Venkatesh Gopalan, Manami Kaneko, Veronique Angeli, Peter Gluckman, Arthur Mark Richards, Philip W Kuchel, S Sendhil Velan.   

Abstract

Obesity is a major risk factor in the development of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and its pathophysiological precondition insulin resistance. Very little is known about the metabolic changes that occur in the myocardium and consequent changes in cardiac function that are associated with high-fat accumulation. Therefore, cardiac function and metabolism were evaluated in control rats and those fed a high-fat diet, using magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic resonance spectroscopy, mRNA analysis, histology, and plasma biochemistry. Analysis of blood plasma from rats fed the high-fat diet showed that they were insulin resistant (P < 0.001). Our high-fat diet model had higher heart weight (P = 0.005) and also increasing trend in septal wall thickness (P = 0.07) compared with control diet rats. Our results from biochemistry, magnetic resonance imaging, and mRNA analysis confirmed that rats on the high-fat diet had moderate diabetes along with mild cardiac hypertrophy. The magnetic resonance spectroscopy results showed the extramyocellular lipid signal only in the spectra from high-fat diet rats, which was absent in the control diet rats. The intramyocellular lipids in high-fat diet rats was higher (8.7%) compared with rats on the control diet (6.1%). This was confirmed by electron microscope and light microscopy studies. Our results indicate that lipid accumulation in the myocardium might be an early indication of the cardiovascular pathophysiology associated with type 2 diabetes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  EMCL; IMCL; cardiac function; cardiac metabolism

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23542917     DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00478.2012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6135            Impact factor:   4.733


  8 in total

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Journal:  Diabetologia       Date:  2015-09-17       Impact factor: 10.122

Review 2.  Obesity, kidney dysfunction and hypertension: mechanistic links.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-03-17       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  MicroRNA-21 abrogates palmitate-induced cardiomyocyte apoptosis through caspase-3/NF-κB signal pathways.

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6.  Multi-Tissue Time-Domain NMR Metabolomics Investigation of Time-Restricted Feeding in Male and Female Nile Grass Rats.

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Authors:  Mariana Diaz-Zamudio; Damini Dey; Troy LaBounty; Michael Nelson; Zhaoyang Fan; Lidia S Szczepaniak; Bill Pei-Chin Hsieh; Ronak Rajani; Daniel Berman; Debiao Li; Rohan Dharmakumar; W David Hardy; Antonio Hernandez Conte
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Magn Reson       Date:  2015-10-31       Impact factor: 5.364

8.  Time course of cardiometabolic alterations in a high fat high sucrose diet mice model and improvement after GLP-1 analog treatment using multimodal cardiovascular magnetic resonance.

Authors:  Inès Abdesselam; Pauline Pepino; Thomas Troalen; Michael Macia; Patricia Ancel; Brice Masi; Natacha Fourny; Bénédicte Gaborit; Benoît Giannesini; Frank Kober; Anne Dutour; Monique Bernard
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  8 in total

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