| Literature DB >> 29582880 |
Keir McCutcheon1, Pravin Manga2.
Abstract
Surgical repair or replacement of the mitral valve is currently the only recommended therapy for severe primary mitral regurgitation. The chronic elevation of wall stress caused by the resulting volume overload leads to structural remodelling of the muscular, vascular and extracellular matrix components of the myocardium. These changes are initially compensatory but in the long term have detrimental effects, which ultimately result in heart failure. Understanding the changes that occur in the myocardium due to volume overload at the molecular and cellular level may lead to medical interventions, which potentially could delay or prevent the adverse left ventricular remodelling associated with primary mitral regurgitation. The pathophysiological changes involved in left ventricular remodelling in response to chronic primary mitral regurgitation and the evidence for potential medical therapy, in particular beta-adrenergic blockers, are the focus of this review.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29582880 PMCID: PMC6002796 DOI: 10.5830/CVJA-2017-009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc J Afr ISSN: 1015-9657 Impact factor: 1.167
Fig. 1Left ventricular remodelling in chronic primary mitral regurgitation. A: Normal LV is represented on the left. Wall stress is normal. B: Chronic compensation with eccentric hypertrophy and dilatation. The increase in LV volume is compensated for by the increase in wall thickness. Wall stress appears to be normalised by the eccentric hypertrophy. FSV is normal because of increased LV filling. C: Adversely remodelled LV of decompensated chronic MR. The myocardial wall is thin resulting in an increase in wall stress. The arrow indicates severe MR, which becomes more severe with a dilating LV. LA = left atrium; LV = left ventricle; TSV = total stroke volume; FSV = forward stroke volume; MR = mitral regurgitation.
Fig. 2Schematic representation of gene regulation in response to myocyte sarcomere stretch via signal transduction through MLP and TK. MLP = muscle LIM protein; TK = titin kinase. See text for details.
Fig. 3A. Proposed time–dependent changes in various remodelling pathways including changes in measured prevalence of mast cells. B. Proposed overall timedependent changes in remodelling pathway activation. MMP = matrix metalloproteinases; β–AR = β–adrenergic; ROS = reactive oxidative species. See text for details.
Studies of beta-blocker therapy and left ventricular function in primary MR
| Tsutsui et al. | 1994 | Dog | Experimental chordal rupture | n = 6 | Case Controlled | n = 6 | Atenolol 50mg daily | 3 months | Cardiocyte contractility, myofibrillar density | + | |
| Nemoto et al. | 2002 | Dog | Experimental chordal rupture | n = 11 | Longitudinal | NA | Atenolol 100 mg Daily | 3 months | Haemodynamics, LV Function | + | |
| Tallaj et al. | 2003 | Dog | Experimental chordal rupture | 2 weeks MR+BB: n = 6 4 weeks MR+BB: n = 8 | Case Controlled | Normal: n = 8 2 weeks MR: n = 8 4 weeks MR: n = 6 | Metoprolol Succinate | 4 weeks | RAAS activation | + | |
| Hankes et al. | 2006 | Dog | Experimental chordal rupture | 4 weeks of MR+BB = 8 | Case Controlled | Normal = 6 Untreated MR = 6 | Metoprolol succinate 100 mg Daily | 4 weeks | NE release into cardiac interstitium | + | |
| Oh et al. | 2007 | Human | 71% degenerative | n = 134 | Retrospective Cohort | NA | Not ascertained | 1–88 Months | Echo LVEF | – | |
| Pat et al. | 2008 | Dog | Experimental chordal rupture | n = 11 | Case Controlled | n = 10 | Metoprolol succinate 100 mg twice daily | 4 months | LV remodelling by MRI and echo; cardiomyocyte function | Improved cardiomyocyte function and BB receptiveness but failure to attenuate remodelling | |
| Sabri et al. | 2008 | Dog | Experimental chordal rupture | n = 6 | Case Controlled | Normal = 6 Untreated MR = 6 | Metoprolol succinate 100 mg Daily | 4 weeks | LV remodelling by echo; interstitial collagen quantification; FAK signalling (integrin signalling) | BB reduced FAK tyrosine phosphorylation but no change in remodeling parameters; BB reduced epicardial collagen loss but not endocardial collagen loss | |
| Varadarajan et al. | 2008 | Human | LVEF > 55% + ‘severe MR’ | n = 218 | Retrospective observational cohort study | n = 614 | Not stated | 8 years | Mortality | + | |
| Stewart et al. | 2008 | Human | MVP | n = 25 | Double-blind cross-over study | NA | Metoprolol to a maximum 190 mg daily | 14 days | MRI EF | – | |
| LVEDV | – | ||||||||||
| LVESV | – | ||||||||||
| LV ‘work’ (CO) | + | ||||||||||
| Ahmed et al. | 2012 | Human | MVP | n = 19 | RCT | n = 19 | Toprol XL | MRI LVEF | + | ||
| 25–100 mg | MRI LVESV | – | |||||||||
| Daily | LV longitudinal strain rate | – | |||||||||
| Pu et al. | 2013 | Rat | Experimental leaflet disruption | n = 43 ‘Long-term’ BB in 19 | RCT | n = 44 | Carvedilol (1 200 ppm) | 36 weeks | Echo only LV dimensions LVESV and mass index FS and EF Survival probability | – | |
| Trappanese et al. | 2015 | Dog | Experimental chordal rupture | n = 8 (MR + BB) | Case Controlled | Normal = 10 | Metoprolol succinate | 4 weeks | Activation of β3AR/ NO-cGMP signalling | + | |
| Untreated MUntreated MR = 8R = 8 | 100 mg Daily | β3-AR expression | + |
BB = beta-blocker; MVP = mitral valve prolapse; RCT = randomised controlled trial; MR = mitral regurgitation; NE = norepinephrine; + indicates that the study favoured BB therapy in primary MR; – indicates that the study did not favour BB therapy in primary MR; LV = left ventricle; LVEF = left ventricular ejection fraction; LVEDV = left ventricular end-diastolic volume; LVESV = left ventricular end-systolic volume; CO = cardiac output; RAAS = renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system; echo = echocardiogram; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging; ppm = parts per million.