| Literature DB >> 26539113 |
Arnoldo Santos1, Leticia Fernández-Friera2, María Villalba3, Beatriz López-Melgar2, Samuel España4, Jesús Mateo5, Ruben A Mota6, Jesús Jiménez-Borreguero7, Jesús Ruiz-Cabello8.
Abstract
Cardiovascular imaging has become an indispensable tool for patient diagnosis and follow up. Probably the wide clinical applications of imaging are due to the possibility of a detailed and high quality description and quantification of cardiovascular system structure and function. Also phenomena that involve complex physiological mechanisms and biochemical pathways, such as inflammation and ischemia, can be visualized in a non-destructive way. The widespread use and evolution of imaging would not have been possible without animal studies. Animal models have allowed for instance, (i) the technical development of different imaging tools, (ii) to test hypothesis generated from human studies and finally, (iii) to evaluate the translational relevance assessment of in vitro and ex-vivo results. In this review, we will critically describe the contribution of animal models to the use of biomedical imaging in cardiovascular medicine. We will discuss the characteristics of the most frequent models used in/for imaging studies. We will cover the major findings of animal studies focused in the cardiovascular use of the repeatedly used imaging techniques in clinical practice and experimental studies. We will also describe the physiological findings and/or learning processes for imaging applications coming from models of the most common cardiovascular diseases. In these diseases, imaging research using animals has allowed the study of aspects such as: ventricular size, shape, global function, and wall thickening, local myocardial function, myocardial perfusion, metabolism and energetic assessment, infarct quantification, vascular lesion characterization, myocardial fiber structure, and myocardial calcium uptake. Finally we will discuss the limitations and future of imaging research with animal models.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; atherosclerosis; biomedical imaging; heart failure; myocardial infarction; pulmonary hypertension
Year: 2015 PMID: 26539113 PMCID: PMC4612690 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2015.00227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Cardiac magnetic resonance images of an anterior acute myocardial infarction in a pig model of ischemia/reperfusion injury. (A) Area at risk in T2-STIR sequence and hyperintense zone in anterior septum. (B) Necrotic zone in late enhancement sequence at the same zone. Published with publisher's permission. Original source: Fernández-Friera et al. (2013). Copyright © 2012 Sociedad Española de Cardiología. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L. All rights reserved.
Figure 2Examples of T2 (A) and T1 parametric maps in animal models of myocardial infarction. (A) Shows the dynamic changes in T2 relaxation times in the ischemic region after permanent coronary occlusion and reperfusion in a pig. (B) Shows pre contrast (upper row) and post-gadolinium contrast on a mouse model. Adapted from Figure 5 of Fernández-Jiménez et al. (2015a) and from Figure 2 of Coolen et al. (2011) with original publisher's permission (Bio Med Central).
Figure 3Representative midventricular short-axis slices PET myocardial perfusion at rest and PET myocardial metabolism using . From Lautamäki et al. (2009) Figure 1. With permission.
Schematic comparison of the different animal models used in cardiovascular imaging research.
| Mouse | Transverse aortic and pulmonary artery constriction | Acute and pressure overload | Easy use of GEM animals. Hypertrophy developed rapidly (2–3 weeks) | Surgical skills. Acute hypertension and expense of equipment for cardiovascular imaging and physiology assessment |
| Mouse | Isoproterenol infusion | Toxic injury of myocardium | Minimal surgery and good scenario for pharmacological or gene therapy | Hypertrophy is adjusted to dose and mouse strain |
| Rat | Spontaneous hypertensive rat and Dahl salt-sensitive rat | Chronic pressure overload | The onset of hypertension is gradual, being the heart failure in later stages. Genetic origin of hypertension. No surgery | Long experimental period (6–12 months) |
| Rat | Ascending aortic and pulmonary artery constriction | Gradual to quick onset pressure overload | Gradual to quick onset hypertension | Less GEM animals and similar cost of equipment for cardiovascular physiology assessment than mouse |
| Rat | Arteriovenous shunts | Overload of ventricular chambers | Progressive heart hypertrophy, more rapidly in the right ventricle. Well tolerate and it possible to reverse the volume-overload state | Greater surgical skills, with a grade of hypertrophy fistula localization-dependent |
| Guinea pig | Descending aortic constriction | Pressure overload and hypertension | Human mimicking alteration of sarcolemma calcium handling | Special and expensive requirements for husbandry |
| Rabbit | Aortic and pulmonary constriction | Gradual onset pressure overload | Imaging technology allows normalizing the grade of constriction. Possibility to reverse the pressure-overload situation | Thoracotomy surgery required |
| Rabbit | Doxorrubicin | Toxicological aggression | Myocyte function and structure modification | High risk of mortality dose dependent |
| Dog | Aortovenus shunt | Volume overload | Progressive heart hypertrophy, more rapidly in the right ventricle | Not so well tolerated than rats. Frequent arrhythmias, edema and quick health decrease |
| Dog | Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy of Boxer | Desmosomes proteins mutation | Genetic origin which mimic the human disease | Social ethical considerations |
| Cat | Inherited Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy of Maine Coon and Persian strains | Sarcomeric protein gene mutations | Genetic origin which mimic the human disease | Social ethical considerations |
| Pig | Descending aortic constriction | Pressure overload and hypertension | Progressive hypertrophy and animal well adapted (constriction grade progresses with animal growth) | Surgical skills and lateral thoracotomy |
| Pig | Pulmonary artery hypertension by microembolization | Increased vascular resistance | Progressive hypertrophy of right ventricle and final heart failure by dilated cardiomyopathy. No surgery | Great hypoxic vasoconstriction |
| Sheep | Ascending aortic constriction | Pressure overload and hypertension | Transition from compensated hypertrophy to left ventricular dysfunction | Zoonotic risk |
| Sheep | Pulmonary artery hypertension by microembolization | Increased vascular resistance | Progressive hypertrophy of right ventricle and final heart failure by dilated cardiomyopathy. No hypoxic vasoconstriction No surgery | Zoonotic risk |
| Mouse | Genetic Engineering modified animals (GEM) | Dilated cardiomyopathy | Genetic modifications of structural and functionality of cardiomyocytes. No required surgery | Clinical reliability restricted to the molecule of study: e.g., TNF-α overexpression |
| Rat | Isoproterenol toxicity | Toxicological aggression | Severe structural modification by necrosis and fibrosis of myocardium | Less GEM animals and similar cost of equipment for cardiovascular physiology assessment than mouse |
| Rabbit | Pacing Tachycardia | Congestive failure by low output | Mimic myocardial alteration of human edematous chronic low output | Limited imaging technology due to paced heart rate (400 beats/min) |
| Rabbit | Balloon occlusion of circumflex branch of left coronary artery | Myocardial infarction | Artery occlusion by catheterization | Great skill and specific material |
| Dog | Pacing Tachycardia | Congestive failure by low output | Mimic myocardial remodeling, neurohumoral activation and subcellular dysfunction | No hypertrophy |
| Dog | Coronary microembolization | Contractile dysfunction and a profound perfusion-contraction mismatch | No surgery requirements | Microspheres are chemically inert. Extensive arterial pattern of heart. Time consuming |
| Pig | Pacing Tachycardia | Congestive failure by low output | Mimic myocardial remodeling, neurohumoral activation and subcellular dysfunction | No hypertrophy nor fibrosis |
| Pig | Coronary microembolization | Contractile dysfunction and a profound perfusion-contraction mismatch | No surgery requirements | Microsphere are chemically inert |
| Pig | Hibernating myocardium | Progressive reduction of ventricle perfusion | Mimic human disease condition | Surgical technical experience and skill. There is a myocardial recovery in chronic studies |
| Sheep | Pacing Tachycardia | Congestive failure by low output | Mimic myocardial remodeling, neurohumoral activation and subcellular dysfunction | No hypertrophy nor fibrosis |
| Sheep | Coronary microembolization | Contractile dysfunction and a profound perfusion-contraction mismatch | No surgery requirements and resemble human condition than dog | Zoonotic risk. Microspheres are chemically inert. Extensive arterial pattern of heart. Time consuming |
| Mouse | Left coronary ligation (total occlusion or ischemia/reperfusion) | Myocardial infarction | Easy use of GEM animals, low cost of husbandry and feasible cardiovascular assessment. Suitability for follow-up and survival studies. | Great surgical skill and expensive technological requirements. Limited sample collection (animal size) |
| Rat | Left coronary ligation (total occlusion or ischemia/reperfusion) | Myocardial infarction | Surgical procedure easier than in mouse and more volume of samples. Lower cost than large animals. Suitability for follow-up and survival studies. | Less GEM animals and similar cost of equipment for cardiovascular physiology assessment than mouse |
| Rabbit | Left coronary ligation (total occlusion or ischemia/reperfusion) | Myocardial infarction | Surgical procedure easier than in rodents and more volume of samples Lower cost than large animals. | Thoracotomy surgery required |
| Dog | Left coronary ligation (total occlusion or ischemia/reperfusion) | Myocardial infarction | Surgical procedure easier than in rodents and more volume of samples Lower cost than large animals. | High death incidence by arrhythmias |
| Pig | Angioplasty balloon occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary | Myocardial infarction | Anatomy and pathology closed to human. Good suitability to undergo imaging techniques. No surgery requirements. | Require skills for coronary catheterization and surgical specific material |
| Zebrafish | Myocardial criolesion | Myocardial infarction | Heart remodeling and regenerative model | Far of mammals biology |
| Mouse | APOE-deficiency and LDL Receptor deficiency | Easy use of GEM animals, low cost of husbandry and feasible cardiovascular assessment. Great valuable data of molecular and cellular events. | Not mimic exactly the human chronic disease. The artery low size complicates the | |
| Rabbit | High-fat diet with/without balloon aortic injury | Easy husbandry and feasible artery imaging acquisition. | Great skill for vessel damage, long term experimental induction of atherogenic lesions and no coronary affection | |
| Rabbit | Watanabe WHHL (LDL Receptor deficiency) | Easy husbandry and feasible artery imaging acquisition. Possible finding of coronary artery lesions. Not necessary high fat diet. | Unstable atherogenic plaque which could develop coronary occlusion and death | |
| Pig | High-fat diet with/without angioplasty | Model closed to human disease | Long term experimental induction of atherogenic lesions. Skills for catheterism | |
| Rat | Chronic Hypoxia | Increase in vascular tone | Repeatable maintained increase in pulmonary artery and RV pressure accompanied by RV remodeling | Minimal vascular remodeling. Suitable just for small animals |
| Rat | Chronic Hypoxia plus SU5416 | Increase in vascular tone plus VEGFR-R blockade | Equal than chronic hypoxia more angiobliterative changes. More increase in RV pressure and more RV hypertrophy | Suitable just for small animals |
| Rat, dog, pig, sheep | Monocrotaline | Endothelial damage | Produces RV failure and vascular remodeling | No plexogenic arteriopathy |
| Dogs pig, sheep | Beads or clots injection | Decrease in total vessel area | Acute increase in pulmonary pressure RV remodeling | Decrease of the severity of vascular and RV changes with time. Hard to titrate the dose. High mortality in some reports |
| Pig, Rat | Aortocaval shunt | Increase in pulmonary artery flow | Resembles major features of human disease | Requires surgical skills. Complications related with surgery |
| Rodents, pig, sheep, dog | Vascular banding | Decrease in vascular compliance | Controllable and maintained increase in pulmonary artery pressure. RV remodeling | Requires surgical skills. Complications related with surgery |
Figure 4Representative short axis (upper panel) and long axis (low panels) cardiac magnetic resonance images taken at the end of diastole (left panels) and systole (right panels) in WT mice. Adapted from Figure 3 in Cruz et al. (2015).
Figure 5Representative high resolution MRI sections to visualize the normal heart structure of zebrafish embryo (A) and an adult fish (B). From Bryson-Richardson et al. (2007) Figure 1 with original publisher's permission (Bio Med Central).
Figure 6T2-Weighted (T2W) (A) and Proton Density (PD) . (C) Corresponding histopathological section with Masson's trichrome elastin stain showing fibrotic and lipid components and magnification (D) showing the foam cell-rich lipid regions and the fibrotic cap. Taken from Helft et al. (2001) with permission.
Figure 7Representative echocardiography (A), MRI (B) pulmonary artery flow in controls and experimental rats with moderate and severe pulmonary hypertension. VTI, velocity time integral; PAAT, pulmonary artery acceleration time; SV, stroke volume; CO, cardiac output. Modified from Urboniene et al. (2010) Figure 2 with permission.