| Literature DB >> 34618287 |
Annamaria Del Franco1, Giuseppe Ambrosio2, Laura Baroncelli3,4, Tommaso Pizzorusso3,5, Andrea Barison6, Iacopo Olivotto7, Fabio A Recchia1,8, Carlo M Lombardi9, Marco Metra9, Yu F Ferrari Chen6, Claudio Passino1,6, Michele Emdin10,11, Giuseppe Vergaro1,6.
Abstract
Impaired cardiac energy metabolism has been proposed as a mechanism common to different heart failure aetiologies. The energy-depletion hypothesis was pursued by several researchers, and is still a topic of considerable interest. Unlike most organs, in the heart, the creatine kinase system represents a major component of the metabolic machinery, as it functions as an energy shuttle between mitochondria and cytosol. In heart failure, the decrease in creatine level anticipates the reduction in adenosine triphosphate, and the degree of myocardial phosphocreatine/adenosine triphosphate ratio reduction correlates with disease severity, contractile dysfunction, and myocardial structural remodelling. However, it remains to be elucidated whether an impairment of phosphocreatine buffer activity contributes to the pathophysiology of heart failure and whether correcting this energy deficit might prove beneficial. The effects of creatine deficiency and the potential utility of creatine supplementation have been investigated in experimental and clinical models, showing controversial findings. The goal of this article is to provide a comprehensive overview on the role of creatine in cardiac energy metabolism, the assessment and clinical value of creatine deficiency in heart failure, and the possible options for the specific metabolic therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac energy metabolism; Creatine; Creatine deficiency; Heart failure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34618287 PMCID: PMC9388465 DOI: 10.1007/s10741-021-10173-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Fail Rev ISSN: 1382-4147 Impact factor: 4.654
Fig. 1Role of creatine in the cardiomyocyte. A specific carrier (CrT) mediates creatine (Cr) uptake from bloodstream into cardiomyocytes. Cr links adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production site to energy utilization sites, like myofibrils and ion pumps. Phosphocreatine (PCr) acts as a highly mobile and short-term energy store. After releasing the phosphate group to generate ATP thanks to the cytosolic creatine kinases (CK) closely coupled to ATPases, free Cr diffuses back to request further ATP production. β-FAO beta fatty acid oxidation, FATP1 fatty acid transport protein 1, FFA free fatty acid, GLUT4 glucose transporter type 4, PiC mitochondrial phosphate carrier, TCA tricarboxylic acid
Fig. 2Creatine biosynthesis. Creatine 2-step biosynthesis: the transfer of an amidino group from arginine to glycine, catalysed by L-arginine:glycine amidinotransferase (AGAT), yields the guanidinoacetate (GA); GA is converted into Cr via the enzyme S-adenosyl-L-methionine:guanidinoacetate N-methyltransferase (GAMT). The first step occurs in the kidney, the second in the liver. Cr and phosphocreatine (PCr), together with creatine kinase (CK), constitute an energy shuttle system. Cr degrades into creatinine, excreted by the kidney
Fig. 331P magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) cardiac evaluation. Characteristic cardiac 31P MRS spectra in A a healthy and B failing heart. In the pathological condition, PCr concentration and CK flux are reduced
Clinical studies on supplementation of creatine (Cr) or phosphocreatine (PCr) in patients with acute or chronic heart failure (HF). NYHA, New York Heart Association; RCT, randomized clinical trial. References provided in Supplemental Material
| Author and year | Type of study | Clinical setting | Cr/PCr dose | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andrews R. (1998) | Controlled trial | Chronic HF: 20 pts | 20 g os daily for 5 days | - Increase in skeletal muscle endurance |
| Carvalho A. P. (2012) | RCT | HF (NYHA II-IV): 33 pts | 5 g os daily for 6 months | - No change in functional capacity at cardiopulmonary exercise test and 6-min walking test |
| Cornelissen V. A. (2010) | RCT | Coronary artery disease or chronic HF: 70 pts | 5 g os daily for 3 months, in combination with exercise training | - No improvement in physical performance, quality of life than exercise training alone |
| Fumagalli S. (2011) | RCT | Chronic HF: 67 pts | Coenzyme Q10 (320 mg) + Cr (340 mg) os daily for 8 weeks | - Improvement in total work capacity and peak oxygen consumption |
| Gordon A. (1995) | Controlled trial | Chronic HF: 17 pts | 20 g os daily for 10 days | - No improvement of ejection fraction - Increase in muscle strength and endurance |
| Kuethe F. (2006) | Controlled trial-crossover trial | Acute HF: 20 pts | 20 g os daily | - Increase in muscle strength - No change in peak VO2, walking distance, quality life assessment, and ejection fraction |
| Andreev N. A. (1992) | RCT | Acute HF: 67 pts | 8 g iv in 200 ml saline at a rate of 4 g/h once a day for 21 days plus diuretic or 8 g iv in 200 ml saline at a rate of 4 g/h once a day for 21 days plus diuretic and digoxin | - Increase in left ventricular ejection fraction - Decrease in systemic vascular resistance - Decrease in ventricular arrhythmias - Decrease in the severity of dyspnoea, frequency of angina attacks - Improvement in exercise tolerance |
| Cafiero M. (1994) | Open clinical trial | HF (NYHA class II-III): 23 pts | 5 g iv bolus administration (acute) or 5 g iv for 6 days | - Amelioration of all indexes of cardiac contractility (wall stress, ejection fraction, and fractional shortening) |
| Du X. H. (2009) | RCT | Elderly patients with chronic HF: 40 pts | 3 g iv in 200 ml glucose 5% once a day for 8 weeks | - Reduced end-systolic and end-diastolic diameters, ejection fraction and B-type natriuretic peptide levels |
| Ferraro S. (1996) | Controlled trial-crossover trial | Acute HF from ischaemic heart disease or dilated cardiomyopathy (NYHA class II-III): 13 pts | 6 g iv diluted in 50 ml of NaCl 0.9% acutely or 6 g infusion for 4 days (short-term treatment) | - Increase in ejection fraction and fractional shortening - Reduced end-systolic diameter and systemic vascular resistance |
| Grazioli I. (1989) | RCT | Chronic HF: 1174 pts | 1 g iv slow infusion every 12 h during 7–21 days | - Improvement of clinical symptoms (dyspnoea, pulmonary stasis, and peripheral oedema), and signs of ischaemia (angina, use of sublingual nitroglycerin, negative T-waves) |
| Grazioli I. (1992) | RCT | HF: 1007 pts | 1 g iv infusion every 12 h for 2 weeks, followed by 500 mg intramuscular daily administration for 1 month | - Improvement of clinical symptoms (dyspnoea, pulmonary stasis, and peripheral oedema), the main signs of ischaemia (angina, number of patients taking sublingual nitroglycerin, negative T wave), and the incidence of ventricular arrhythmias |
| Wang F. R.(2006) | RCT | Chronic HF (NYHA class III-IV): 64 pts | 2 g iv in 100 ml saline for 14 days | - Improvement in left ventricular ejection fraction, stroke volume, and cardiac output - Lowering in B-type natriuretic peptide levels |
| Ying W. (2013) | RCT | Hypertensive cardiac diastolic dysfunction | 2.0 g iv plus losartan-hydrochlorothiazide | - Lower systolic and diastolic blood pressure - Improvement of the diastolic dysfunction |