| Literature DB >> 27690014 |
Joaquim Fernández-Solà1, Ana Planavila Porta2.
Abstract
High-dose alcohol misuse induces multiple noxious cardiac effects, including myocyte hypertrophy and necrosis, interstitial fibrosis, decreased ventricular contraction and ventricle enlargement. These effects produce diastolic and systolic ventricular dysfunction leading to congestive heart failure, arrhythmias and an increased death rate. There are multiple, dose-dependent, synchronic and synergistic mechanisms of alcohol-induced cardiac damage. Ethanol alters membrane permeability and composition, interferes with receptors and intracellular transients, induces oxidative, metabolic and energy damage, decreases protein synthesis, excitation-contraction coupling and increases cell apoptosis. In addition, ethanol decreases myocyte protective and repair mechanisms and their regeneration. Although there are diverse different strategies to directly target alcohol-induced heart damage, they are partially effective, and can only be used as support medication in a multidisciplinary approach. Alcohol abstinence is the preferred goal, but control drinking is useful in alcohol-addicted subjects not able to abstain. Correction of nutrition, ionic and vitamin deficiencies and control of alcohol-related systemic organ damage are compulsory. Recently, several growth factors (myostatin, IGF-1, leptin, ghrelin, miRNA, and ROCK inhibitors) and new cardiomyokines such as FGF21 have been described to regulate cardiac plasticity and decrease cardiac damage, improving cardiac repair mechanisms, and they are promising agents in this field. New potential therapeutic targets aim to control oxidative damage, myocyte hypertrophy, interstitial fibrosis and persistent apoptosis In addition, stem-cell therapy may improve myocyte regeneration. However, these strategies are not yet approved for clinical use.Entities:
Keywords: FGF21; IGF-1; alcoholic cardiomyopathy; apoptosis; cardiomyokines; fibrosis; hypertrophy; miRNA; myostatin; regeneration
Year: 2016 PMID: 27690014 PMCID: PMC5085684 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17101651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Mechanisms of alcohol-induced heart damage.
| Mechanisms | Effectors |
|---|---|
| Interference with cell signaling and calcium transients [ | MAPK, TGF-β, PKC, PPARγ, MMPs, NF-κβ, PAI-1 |
| Decrease in excitation-contraction coupling mechanisms [ | intracellular [Ca]2+ transients, L-type Ca2+ channel |
| Induction of oxidative damage [ | ROS, SOD, acetaldehyde |
| Pro-inflammatory effect [ | IL-2, TNF-α, NF-κβ |
| Induction of apoptosis [ | FAS, TNF-α, TGF-β, Bax-Bcl-2, caspases 3,6 |
| Induction of fibrosis [ | TLR-4, TGF-β |
| Protein-adduct formation [ | protein-ethanol-adducts |
| malondialdehyde-DNA adducts | |
| Disruption in protein synthesis [ | decrease in ribosomal protein synthesis, actin, myosin, troponin, titin |
| Increased glycogen deposition [ | glycogen synthase kinase-3β, PARP |
| Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone activation [ | renin, angiotensin, aldosterone, p38 MAPK/Smad |
| Interference in hormone-growth factors [ | myostatin, ghrelin, leptin, IGF-1 |
| Interference in regulatory cardiomyokines [ | FGF21 |
| Decrease in myocyte regeneration [ | myostatin, IGF-1 |
| Impairment of extracellular matrix turnover [ | cytoskeletal structure, connexin channel, desmosome contacts |
| Imbalance between cardiac lesions/repair mechanisms [ | cell apoptosis and necrosis increased myocardial fibrosis decreased myocyte regeneration |
The effects of high-dose alcohol on short and long-term cardiovascular damage.
| Short-Term Effects on the Heart | Long-Term Effects on the Heart | Long-Term Effects on the Vascular System | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dysfunction of cardiac contractility | Ventricular dysfunction | Diastolic dysfunction | Increased systemic atherosclerosis | |
| Systolic dysfunction | ||||
| Acute arrhythmias supraventricular ventricular (holiday heart syndrome) | Atrial dysfunction | Arterial hypertension | ||
| Arterial hypertension | Chronic arrhythmias | Peripheral artery disease | ||
| Transitory ischemic cerebral attack | Alcoholic cardiomyopathy | Subclinical cardiomyopathy | Changes in lipid profile | Increase in LDL cholesterol |
| Clinical congestive heart failure | Increase in triglycerides | |||
| Low-output dilated cardiomyopathy | ||||
| Sudden death | Coronary heart disease | Angina | Increased risk of diabetes | |
| Myocardial infarction | ||||
| Increased cardiovascular mortality | Interference with other cardiotoxic drugs (tobacco, cocaine) | |||
Figure 1Role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in alcohol-induced heart damage.