BACKGROUND: The role of autonomic nervous system in the development and maintenance of portal hypertension is not fully elucidated. It is known that the gene expression of norepinephrine in the superior mesenteric artery varies with time, and it may contribute for splanchnic vasodilation and its consequent hemodynamic repercussions. It is still not known exactly how the adrenergic expression behaves at the heart level in the initial stages of this process. AIM: To evaluate the immunohistochemical expression of the enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase (tyrosine 3-monooxygenase), involved in the synthesis of norepinephrine, in the myocardium of rats submitted to partial ligation of the portal vein. METHODS: Twenty-four Wistar rats were divided into two groups: Sham Operated and Portal Hypertension. The partial ligation was performed in the Portal Hypertension group, and after 1/6/24 h and 3/5/14 days the animals were euthanized. Immunohistochemical analysis was performed to quantify the expression of the stained enzyme using the ImageJ program. RESULTS: The Portal Hypertension group expressed percentages between 4.6-6% of the marked area, while the Sham Operated group varied between 4-5%. Although there was no statistical significance, the percentage stained in the Portal Hypertension group followed an increasing pattern in the first 6 h and a decreasing pattern after 24 h, which was not observed in the Sham Operated group. CONCLUSION: The expression of noradrenaline in rat myocardium during the first two weeks after partial ligation of the portal vein, with tyrosine hydroxylase as marker, did not show differences between groups over time.
BACKGROUND: The role of autonomic nervous system in the development and maintenance of portal hypertension is not fully elucidated. It is known that the gene expression of norepinephrine in the superior mesenteric artery varies with time, and it may contribute for splanchnic vasodilation and its consequent hemodynamic repercussions. It is still not known exactly how the adrenergic expression behaves at the heart level in the initial stages of this process. AIM: To evaluate the immunohistochemical expression of the enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase (tyrosine 3-monooxygenase), involved in the synthesis of norepinephrine, in the myocardium of rats submitted to partial ligation of the portal vein. METHODS: Twenty-four Wistar rats were divided into two groups: Sham Operated and Portal Hypertension. The partial ligation was performed in the Portal Hypertension group, and after 1/6/24 h and 3/5/14 days the animals were euthanized. Immunohistochemical analysis was performed to quantify the expression of the stained enzyme using the ImageJ program. RESULTS: The Portal Hypertension group expressed percentages between 4.6-6% of the marked area, while the Sham Operated group varied between 4-5%. Although there was no statistical significance, the percentage stained in the Portal Hypertension group followed an increasing pattern in the first 6 h and a decreasing pattern after 24 h, which was not observed in the Sham Operated group. CONCLUSION: The expression of noradrenaline in rat myocardium during the first two weeks after partial ligation of the portal vein, with tyrosine hydroxylase as marker, did not show differences between groups over time.
The portal vein is formed by the union of superior mesenteric and splenic veins, and
its tributaries include gastric and pancreatoduodenal veins. It extends to the
hepatic hilum, and it is divided into right and left hepatic veins. It has a
segmental intrahepatic distribution, accompanying the hepatic artery
,
. The liver receives a total blood flow about 1,200 ml/min, which represents
approximately 25% of the cardiac output. It receivesa
dualblood supply: 25% of the volume comes from the hepatic
artery, and 75% from the portal vein
.The portal venous system has two important hemodynamic characteristics, which are the
high blood flow with low resistance and low pressure. In adults, the portal pressure
is approximately 7 mmHg
. It is directly related to resistance and blood flow, according to Ohm’s law
(ΔP=Q x R)
,
. The ΔP corresponds to the portal vein pressure gradient (difference between
portal pressure and inferior cava vein pressure), Q to portal blood flow and R to
flow resistance
. Portal hypertension (PH) is the clinical syndrome usually secondary to
intrahepatic or extrahepatic obstruction of the portal flow, in which the increased
portal blood flow resistance is the primary factorin the
pathophysiology of portal hypertension
.PH is classified as pre-hepatic (eg. portal vein/splenic thrombosis), intra-hepatic
(eg. cirrhosis) and post-hepatic (eg. hepatic vein/inferior cava vein thrombosis or
congestive heart failure). The most common cause of PH is cirrhosis, whose increased
resistance is primarily caused by distortion of the liver architecture (fibrosis and
regenerative nodules). It is worth remembering that about one-third of the increase
in resistance is due to intra-hepatic vasoconstriction, which can be
vasodilated
. Due to the fact that the portal system is a set of veins that anastomose in
the same place, whenever there is an obstruction, there will be increased pressure
and development of collateral circulation, such as esophagogastric varices,
perpetuating the development of splanchnic hyperdynamic circulation
,
.This vasodilation and reduction of systemic vascular resistance leads to reduction of
the effective arterial blood volume and activates the sympathetic nervous system,
renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and increases the release of vasopressin and
endothelin-1, causing sodium retention and water. The consequences are increased
plasma volume, cardiac output and heart rate, and decreased renal blood flow,
hypotension, and more retention of fluid and water. Once hyperdynamic circulation is
established, it can increase portal flow and cause further damage to the portal
pressure. The portal hypertension and portosystemic shunt become an enclosed vicious
cycle
.Vasodilators - particularly nitric oxide and endothelins - appear to play a central
role in circulatory derangement and contribute to the mechanism of splanchnic
vasodilation
. In addition, endotoxins probably induce the production of prostacyclins,
which also contribute to this process
. Sympathetic atrophy also occurs in the splanchnic area, due to the high
levels of vasodilators, such as nitric oxide, and the reduction of vascular
reactivity to vasoconstrictors
. In cirrhotic patients, in contrast, there is less production of nitric
oxide in hepatic microvasculature, which also contributes to the hyperdynamic
circulation
. Thus, splanchnic vasodilation appears to be the initial hemodynamic event
following the increase in portal pressure, and also the trigger of subsequent
hemodynamic changes, in which nitric oxide seems to be the main vasodilator
involved
.The portal vein partial ligation model (PVPL)
has been widely used in the study of the pathophysiology of PH, because it
reproduces all stages and hemodynamic changes in a well established sequence of
events, making it possible to predict chronobiologically the changes that lead to
hyperdynamic circulation
. Studies suggest that the excessive endothelial production of nitric oxide
is directly related to the mesenteric vasoconstriction that occurs early after PVPL,
and this vasoconstriction is a myogenic reflex to the acute increase of portal
pressure and probably to vasoconstrictors. Right after the PVPL, there is an
up-regulation of the genes related to adrenergic neurotransmission, and lately there
is a down-regulation of the expression of these adrenergic genes and increased
nitric oxide synthesis by the activation of NO synthetase, with characteristic
mesenteric vasodilatation of the rats submitted to PVPL; this contributes to the
state of hyperdynamic circulation and leads to the other complications of PH
.The activation of such neurohumoral axis and the consequent hyperdynamic circulation
of PH may lead to cardiac morphological and functional modifications, as the
increase of the left and right atria and the increase of the diastolic diameter of
the right ventricle. This can be interpreted as a cardiac hemodynamic adaptation to
peripheral circulation changes, such as preload increase. Changes in diastolic
function are frequently reported in these patients, and their presence is considered
an early marker of cardiac injury
.Todate,no experimental studies have quantified
adrenergic expression in the myocardium in the early stages of PH development.The aim of this study was to analyze the expression of noradrenaline in the
myocardium of rats during the first two weeks after PVPL, using the enzyme tyrosine
hydroxylase (TH) as the marker
.
METHODS
The experiment was conducted at Faculdade Evangélica do Paraná (FEPAR) and the
Institute of Medical Research (IPEM), Curitiba, PR, Brazil. The research project was
approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Evangelical Beneficent Society of
Curitiba (1408/2016). The procedures were in agreement with the ones recommended by
the Ethical Committee on the Use of Animals of FEPAR.Twenty-four male Wistar rats weighing between 200-300 g, from the Animal Hospital of
the Paraná Institute of Technology, were maintained in the IPEM biotery in plastic
boxes of 47x34x18 cm lined with a 12-h light/dark cycle and 22 ± 2° C temperature.
The animals were treated daily with filtered water and appropriate ration
administered freely.They were divided into two groups: Sham Operated, group submitted to the simulation
of the operation, without the PVPL; and PVPL. A mixture of xylazine hydrochloride 10
mg/kg and ketamine hydrochloride 90 mg/kg intraperitoneally was used to anesthetize
the animals. After anesthesia, the surgical intervention began with tricotomy and
disinfection of the abdominal region, followed by a medium ventral laparotomy. The
gut was gently exposed over a gauze humidified with saline and the portal vein was
isolated. A 20 G needle was placed over the portal vein and both joined by a 3.0
silk thread. After the portal vein stenosis, the needle was gently removed. It was
certified that there was no portal vein thrombosis during this manipulation
. The abdominal’s skinclosure was done by simple
interruptedsuture technique, while peritoneum and abdominal
muscle layer were closed with continuoussuture. The Sham Operated
underwent the same procedure, but they had their portal vein only manipulated. Figure 1 represents the schematic model of PVPL,
established by Sikuler et al
.
FIGURE 1
Portal vein partial ligation model (PVPL)
After 1, 6 and 24 h, and 3, 5 and 14 days after the procedure, the rats were
euthanized with an overdoseofanestheticagents (the
same substances used in the pre-procedure anesthesia)
byintraperitonealinjection. After euthanasia, the heart was
removed, fixed in 10% formaldehyde dissolved in 0.1M PBS and pH 7.4 and the tissue
was processed by conventional histological techniques. The fragments were embedded
in paraffin and were cut in transverse sections. They were submitted to
immunohistochemical analysis for TH, and myocardium (left ventricle) microscopic
images were captured at 40x magnification. The captures were recorded in 24-bit and,
with ImageJ software, which transformed them into 8-bit blue color. After the
“threshold” command, followed by the “measure” command, the images were processed
and the percentages of areas stained by the TH was quantified for later statistical
analysis.
Statistical analysis
The data collected were submitted to the software GraphpadInstat, version 3.0 for
Windows XP2000, using the Wilcoxon test, adopting a significance level of 5%
(p<0.05).
RESULTS
Twenty-four rats, 12 PVPL and 12 Sham Operated participated in the experiment, and
the samples were obtained at 1, 6 and 24 h and 3, 5 and 14 days. In Figure 2, the myocardial photomicrographs
obtained after 1 h (A), 6 h (B) and 24 h (C) can be observed and in Figure 3 the 3 (D), 5 (E) and 14 (F) days of
PVPL, at 24-bit, 8-bit resolutions and after the threshold command, respectively.
The darker areas represent TH staining.
FIGURE 2
Myocardium in 1 h (A), 6 h (B) e 24 h (C) (40x)
FIGURE 3
Myocardium in 3 (D), 5 (E) and 14 (F) days (40x)
The percentage of area marked by TH was calculated by applying the “threshold”
command followed by “measure” and the percentages of areas stained are expressed
in Table 1. The myocardium expressed
percentages ranging from 4-5.1% in the Sham Operated group, and 4.6-6.8% in the PVPL
group. There was no significant difference between groups (p <0.05). However, it
is interesting to observe the different patterns of curves of the percentage stained
by TH over time between groups, best seen in Figure
4.
TABLE 1
Area marked by TH in each group (%)
Sham Operated
PVPL
1h
5,143
4,685
6h
5,065
6,020
24h
4,544
6,823
3d
4,886
5,045
5d
4,129
4,655
14d
4,042
5,020
FIGURE 4
Area marked by TH over timer (%)
DISCUSSION
Many studies seek to elucidate the role of the autonomic nervous system in PH.
Despite the increase systemic levels of catecholamines, it is known that this
overactivity of the sympathetic nervous system is not homogeneous, since there are
organs and tissues in which this overactivity has not been verified. The mesenteric
vessels, for example, there is an important down-regulation of the genes related to
adrenergic neurotransmission in the superior mesenteric artery after PVPL,
accompanied also by regression/atrophy of sympathetic innervation throughout the
mesenteric vascular territory. However, this nervous atrophy is not present in other
vascular beds, such as the renal arteries. Mesenteric adrenergic down-regulation can
be interpreted as a local consequence of PH, that may contribute to aggravate
splanchnic vasodilation, which is responsible for generalized sympathetic
hyperactivity, especially in muscles and kidneys
.The available experimental evidences do not allow for a definitive conclusion about
the importance of the sympathetic nervous system in the development of cardiac
hypertrophy
. Studies suggest that increased markers of sympathetic innervation may be a
common feature of early stages of compensated cardiac hypertrophy, regardless of the
time. Sympathetic neural mechanisms do not seem to play a stimulating or trophic
role in the hypertrophic process. On the other hand, they appear to be a secondary
event, suggesting a possible stimulatory influence of sympathetic cardiac nerves
over hypertrophied myocardium
. However, it is also known that norepinephrine and acetylcholine are
depleted with the progression of manifest heart failure. This depletion causes less
support for cardiac output in response to sympathetic nerve activation
. Based on these principles, the PVPL would present both inherent sympathetic
hyperactivity - consequent to PH - and the stimulation of the sympathetic nervous
system by induced cardiac hypertrophy.In this experiment, the TH immunohistochemistry in the myocardium after 1, 6, 24 h
and 3, 5 and 14 days of PVPL was evaluated in order to identify the behavior of the
sympathetic nervous system at the cardiac level in the different stages of PH. The
PVPL model reproduces all systemic and hemodynamic changes detected in PH and the
state of hyperdynamic circulation: increased pressure and portal flow, appearance of
port-systemic shunts, splanchnic vasodilation with reduction of arterial and
splanchnic flow resistance, systemic vasodilation with hypotension, reduction of
peripheral resistance and increase in cardiac output. This model is very
homogeneous, reproducible and with excellent chronobiological prediction, which
elucidates the sequence of events involved in hyperdynamic circulation. The
port-systemic shunt is detected after two days of PVPL and the percentage of portal
blood inflow diverted to collaterals approaches 100% after one week. The circulation
becomes hyperdynamic 4-5 days after PVPL and, one week after the procedure, the rats
present a full range of PH changes
.In this study, the myocardium expressed percentages that varied from 4 to 5.1% in the
Sham Operated group, and from 4.6 to 6.8% in the PVPL group. Although there was no
significant difference between the groups, it is interesting to observe the
different patterns of growth curves of the
percentageareastained by TH over time. In the
PVPL group, there was an elevation in the first 6 h, remained stable until the end
of the first 24 h, and then presented a decreasing pattern until the 5th
day. After the 5th and until the 14th day, the percentage
returned to levels similar to those at the beginning of the experiment. This pattern
was not observed in the Sham Operated group, whose levels maintained stable during
the 14 days of experiment. Analyzing the chronobiological prediction of PVPL, the
return of the percentageareastained after the
5th to the 14th day may be related to the beginning of the
hyperdynamic circulation, predicted in this model from the 4th to the
5th day. Similarly to the mesenteric arterial bed, in which there is
an initial sympathetic up-regulation with subsequent down-regulation, there may be
in the myocardium similar mechanisms associated. However, further studies are needed
to understand why the curves were so discrepant between the groups over the 14 days
experiment.
CONCLUSION
The expression of noradrenaline in rat myocardium during the first two weeks after
partial ligation of the portal vein, with tyrosine hydroxylase as marker, did not
show differences between groups over time.
Authors: Andressa de Souza Bertoldi; Camila Roginski Guetter; Gabriel Antonio Coltro; Larissa Maria Vosgerau; Laura Maria Viscardi Brighenti; Natália Izycki Fauat; Fernando Bermudez Kubrusly; Camila Aparecida Moraes Marques; Luiz Fernando Kubrusly Journal: Arq Bras Cir Dig Date: 2020-12-16