| Literature DB >> 34644731 |
Eduardo Carvalho de Arruda Veiga1, Ricardo Dos Santos Simões2, Leonardo L Caviola2, Luiz Carlos Abreu3, Ricardo Carvalho Cavalli1, José Cipolla-Neto4, Edmund Chada Baracat2, José Maria Soares Júnior2.
Abstract
Melatonin, a hormone released by the pineal gland, demonstrates several effects on the cardiovascular system. Herein, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to verify the effects of melatonin in an experimental model of myocardial infarction. We performed a systematic review according to PRISMA recommendations and reviewed MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane databases. Only articles in English were considered. A systematic review of the literature published between November 2008 and June 2019 was performed. The meta-analysis was conducted using the RevMan 5.3 program provided by the Cochrane Collaboration. In total, 858 articles were identified, of which 13 were included in this review. The main results of this study revealed that melatonin benefits the cardiovascular system by reducing infarct size, improving cardiac function according to echocardiographic and hemodynamic analyses, affords antioxidant effects, improves the rate of apoptosis, decreases lactate dehydrogenase activity, enhances biometric analyses, and improves protein levels, as analyzed by western blotting and quantitative PCR. In the meta-analysis, we observed a statistically significant decrease in infarct size (mean difference [MD], -20.37 [-23.56, -17.18]), no statistical difference in systolic pressure (MD, -1.75 [-5.47, 1.97]), a statistically significant decrease in lactate dehydrogenase in animals in the melatonin group (MD, -4.61 [-6.83, -2.40]), and a statistically significant improvement in the cardiac ejection fraction (MD, -8.12 [-9.56, -6.69]). On analyzing potential bias, we observed that most studies presented a low risk of bias; two parameters were not included in the analysis, and one parameter had a high risk of bias. Melatonin exerts several effects on the cardiovascular system and could be a useful therapeutic target to combat various cardiovascular diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34644731 PMCID: PMC8478132 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2021/e2863
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Figure 1Flow chart of experimental design.
Study characteristics of selected control experimental studies assessing melatonin and the cardiovascular system.
| Authors | Animal type | Animal race | Age (months) | Weight | Induction model | Site injury |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhang et al. (21) | Mice | C57/B6 | - | - | Sepsis-induced cardiac dysfunctional | Cardiovascular system |
| Benova et al. (22) | Rat | Wistar | 9 months | - | Obesity | Cardiovascular system |
| Chen et al. (23) | Rat | Sprague-Dawley | - | 200-250 g | Myocardial ischemia reperfusion | Myocardial tissue |
| Liu et al. (24) | Mice | C57/B6 | 6 months | - | Myocardial infarction | Heart |
| Simko et al. (25) | Rat | Wistar | 3 months | - | hypertension | Cardiovascular system |
| Simko et al. (26) | Rat | Wistar | 3 months | hypertension | Cardiovascular system | |
| Stacchiotti et al. (27) | Mice | B6.VLEAN/OlaHsd and B6.V-Lepob/OlaHsd | 4 weeks | - | Obesity | Mitochondria of cardiomyocyte |
| Chaudagar et al. (28) | Rat | Wistar | 8 months | - | hypertension | Cardiovascular system |
| Salmanoglu et al. (29) | Rat | Wistar | - | 250-350 g | Diabetic | Liver tissue |
| Cheng et al. (30) | Rabbits | New Zealand | 4 weeks | 2.0-2.5 kg | Atherosclerosis | Aorta |
| Liu et al. (31) | Rat | Sprague-Dawley | 3 months | 280-360 g | Myocardial ischemia reperfusion | Myocardial tissue |
| Zhu et al. (32) | Rat | Sprague-Dawley | 10 weeks | 250 g | Myocardial infarction | Heart |
| Liu et al. (33) | Rat | - | - | 350-400 g | Myocardial ischemia reperfusion | Heart |
| Drobnik et al. (34) | Rat | Wistar | 4 weeks | 290-320 g | Myocardial infarction | Heart |
| Repova et al. (35) | Rat | Wistar | 3 months | hypertension | Cardiovascular system | |
| Drobnik et al. (36) | Rat | Wistar | - | 300-330 g | Myocardial infarction | Heart |
| Chen et al. (37) | Mice | Mice Gpx-/- C57BL/6 | - | - | Myocardial ischemia reperfusion | Heart |
| Petrosillo et al. (38) | Rat | Wistar | - | 250-330 g | Myocardial ischemia reperfusion | Heart |
Characteristics (samples size, number of groups, number of animals/groups, dependent variables) of selected experimental studies assessing the effects of melatonin and the cardiovascular system.
| Authors | Sample size | Number of groups | Number of animals/groups | Melatonin administration | Melatonin doses | Dependent variables |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhang et al. (21) | 24 | 4 | 6 | Intraperitoneal injection | 30 mg/kg | Echo, histological analysis, creatinine kinase measurement, TUNEL analysis, western blotting. |
| Benova et al. (22) | 48 | 4 | 12 | Drinking water | 10 mg of melatonin was dissolved in 100 mL of water for 8 weeks | Heart function in Langendorff perfusion, western blot, real-time PCR, |
| Chen et al. (23) | 30 | 5 | Intraperitoneal at the reperfusion | 20 mg/kg | Echo, IS2, lactate dehydrogenase release, CMEC measurement | |
| Liu et al. (24) | 18 | 3 | 6 | Gavage | 50 mg/kg | Echo, histological analysis, PCR, western blot, CTRP3 detection. |
| Simko et al. (25) | 40 | 4 | 10 | Water consumption was 12-13 mL/100 g of body weight | 10 mg of melatonin was dissolved in 100 mL of water for 4 weeks | Hemodynamics measures, biometric analysis, determination of hydroxyproline, angiotensin, and aldosterone analysis. |
| Simko et al. (26) | 66 | 6 | 11 | Drinking water adjustment to daily water consumption to ensure the correct dosage | 10 mg/kg/ day for 6 weeks | Hemodynamics measures, determination of hydroxyproline, NO synthase activity, oxidative load measurement, and western blotting of NF-ΚB. |
| Stacchiotti et al. (27) | 40 | 4 | 10 | 5th to 13th weeks of life/drinking water | 100 mg/kg/day for 8 weeks | Histomorphometric evaluations, nuclear cardiomyocyte morphometry, mitochondrial and immunohistochemical analysis. |
| Chaudagar et al. (28) | 24 | 4 | 6 | Drinking water | 10 mg/kg/day for 67 days | Hemodynamics measures, biometric analysis, and NO assays. |
| Salmanoglu et al. (29) | 35 | 6 | - | Oral gavage | 10 mg/kg/day for 2 weeks | Vasocontractile response, measurement of total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, glucose, NO, and insulin, MDA assay, and tissue antioxidant levels. |
| Cheng et al. (30) | 60 | 3 | 20 | - | 20 mg/kg for 4 weeks | Immunohistochemical analysis, HE staining, western blot analysis, and qRT-PCR. |
| Liu et al. (31) | 60 | 5 | 12 | Intravenous injection immediately after reperfusion | 10 mg/kg | IF2, myocardial ultrastructure, western blotting and determination of the opening degree of MPTPs. |
| Zhu et al. (32) | - | - | - | Melatonin stem cells were treated for 24 hours | 5 µM | Measurements of cell culture antioxidant properties, apoptosis, analysis of paracrine factors, LV functions, histology. |
| Liu et al. (33) | 60 | 6 | 12 | Intraperitoneal injection | Group I: 2.5 mg/kg, Group II: 5 mg/kg, Group III: 10 mg/kg | Hemodynamics measures, apoptosis, electron microscope examination, analysis on mitochondria. |
| Drobnik et al. (34) | 21 | 3 | 7 | Drinking water for 6 weeks | 10 mg/kg | Collagen determination, estimation of glycosaminoglycans, electron microscope examination. |
| Repova et al. (35) | 40 | 4 | 10 | Drinking water for 6 weeks | 10 mg/kg | Collagen determination, hemodynamics measures. |
| Drobnik et al. (36) | 60 | 5 | 12 | Intraperitoneal injection for 4 weeks | Group 1: 300 µg/100 g b.w. Group 4: 3 mg/100 g.b.w. Group 5: 1.5 mg/100 g.b.w. | Estimation of lipid peroxidation, collagen determination, estimation of glycosaminoglycans. |
| Chen et al. (37) | - | - | - | Intraperitoneal injection 30 min before harvesting the hear for | 150 µg/kg | Cardiac function, hemodynamics measures, lactate dehydrogenase released, apoptosis, immunohistochemistry. |
| Petrosillo et al. (38) | 42 | 6 | 7 | Krebs-Henseleit solution for isolated heart | 50 µM | Infarct size, lactate dehydrogenase released, hemodynamics measures, analysis on mitochondria. |
IS1, measurement of infarct size by echocardiography; IS2, measurement of infarct size by Evans Blue or tetrazolium; echo, echocardiography measurements; CMEC, cardiac microvascular endothelial cells; IRI, ice recrystallization inhibition; CTRP3, C1q TNF Related Protein 3; NO, nitric oxide; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; MDA, malondialdehyde; qRT-PCR, quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; LV, left ventricular; MPTP, mitochondrial permeability transition pore; NF-ΚB, Nuclear factor-kappa B; g.b.w., gross body weight; HE, hematoxylin-eosin.
Most frequent recommendations appearing in preclinical research guidelines for in vivo animal experiments [Hendersen et al. (18)].
| Validity type | Recommendation Category | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Internal | Choice of sample size | Power calculation, larger samples sizes |
| Randomized allocation of animals to treatment | Various methods of randomization | |
| Blinding of outcome assessment | Blinded measurement or analysis | |
| Flow of animals through an experiment | Recording animals excluded from treatment through to analysis | |
| Selection of appropriate control groups | Using negative, positive, concurrent, or vehicle control groups | |
| Study of dose-response relationships | Testing above and below optimal therapeutic dose | |
| Construct | Characterization of animal properties at baseline | Characterizing inclusion/exclusion criteria, disease severity, age or sex |
| Matching model to the human manifestation of the disease | Matching mechanism, chronicity or symptoms | |
| Treatment response along a mechanistic pathway | Characterizing pathway in terms of molecular biology, histology, physiology or behavior | |
| Matching outcome measures to clinical settings | Using functional or non-surrogate outcome measures | |
| Matching model to the age of patients in clinical settings | Using aged or juvenile animals | |
| External | Replication in different models of the same disease | Different transgenic strains or lesion techniques |
| Independent replication | Different investigators or research groups | |
| Replication in different species | Rodents and nonhuman primates | |
| Research program | Inter-study standardization of experimental design | Coordination between independent research groups |
Most frequent recommendations in preclinical research guidelines for in vivo animal experiments [Henderson et al. (18)].
| Validity type | Recommendation Category | Studies | n (Percent of guidelines Citing) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Internal | Choice of sample size | Zhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 61.11% |
| Randomized allocation of animals to treatment | Zhang et al. (21); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36). | 61.11% | |
| Blinding of outcome assessment | Zhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Liu et al. (24); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 100% | |
| Flow of animals through an experiment | - | - | |
| Selection of appropriate control groups | Zhang et al. (21); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 77.77% | |
| Study of dose-response relationships | Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Chaudagar et al. (28); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 61.11% | |
| Construct | Characterization of animal properties at baseline | Zhang et al (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Liu et al (24); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 100% |
| Matching model to the human manifestation of the disease | Zhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 88.88% | |
| Treatment response along a mechanistic pathway | Zhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Liu et al. (24); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 100% | |
| Matching outcome measures to clinical settings | Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Liu et al. (31); Liu et al. (33); Repova et al. (35); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 66.66% | |
| Matching model to the age of patients in clinical settings | Zhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Liu et al. (24); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 100% | |
| External | Replication in different models of the same disease | - | - |
| Independent replication | Zhang et al. (21); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Cheng et al. (30); Zhu et al. (32); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 77.77% | |
| Replication in different species | Zhang et al. (21); Benova et al. (22); Chen et al. (23); Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Salmanoglu et al. (29); Liu et al. (31); Zhu et al. (32); Liu et al. (33); Drobnik et al. (34); Repova et al. (35); Drobnik et al. (36); Chen et al. (37); Petrosillo et al. (38). | 88.88% | |
| Research program | Inter-study standardization of experimental design | Simko et al. (25); Simko et al. (26); Stacchiotti et al. (27); Chaudagar et al. (28); Zhu et al. (32); Repova et al. (35); Chen et al. (37). | 38.88% |
Study characteristics of selected controlled animal studies assessing melatonin and the cardiovascular system.
| Authors | Assessments | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhang et al. (21) | S | S | S | S | S | S |
| Echocardiography measurements | Apoptosis analysis | Western blotting | Creatinine kinase measurement | Immunohistochemical analysis | Detection of autophagosomes | |
| Benova et al. (22) | S | S | S | S | NS | |
| Biometric analysis | Western blotting | qRT-PCR | Hemodynamics measures | |||
| Chen et al. (23) | S | S | S | S | S | S |
| Measurements of the infarct size | Measurement of lactate dehydrogenase | Measures of CMEC | Western blotting | qRT-PCR | Detection of autophagosomes | |
| Liu et al. (24) | S | S | S | S | S | |
| Echocardiography measurements | Hemodynamics measurements | Apoptosis analysis | Western blotting | qRT-PCR | ||
| Simko et al. (25) | S | S | NS | S | NS | |
| Biometric analysis | Hemodynamics measures | Determination of hydroxyproline | Angiotensin analysis | Aldosterone analysis | ||
| Simko et al. (26) | NS | S | S | S | S | |
| Hemodynamics measures | Determination of hydroxyproline | NO synthase activity | Oxidative load | Measurement and western blotting of NF-ΚB | ||
| Stacchiotti et al. (27) | S | S | S | S | ||
| Histomorphometrically evaluations | Nuclear cardiomyocyte morphometric | Mitochondrial analysis | Immunohistochemical analysis | |||
| Chaudagar et al. (28) | NS | S | S | |||
| Hemodynamics measures | Biometric analysis | NO assays | ||||
| Salmanoglu et al. (29) | NS | NS | S | S | NS | |
| Vasocontractile response | Measures of total cholesterol, LDL, HDL | NO assays | MDA assay | Measurements of tissue antioxidant levels | ||
| Cheng et al. (30) | S | S | S | |||
| Immunohistochemical analysis | Western blotting | qRT-PCR | ||||
| Liu et al. (31) | S | S | S | |||
| Measurements of the infarcted size | Western blotting | Determination of the opening degree of MPTPs | ||||
| Zhu et al. (32) | S | S | S | |||
| Measurements of cell cultures antioxidant properties | Apoptosis analysis | LV functions | ||||
| Liu et al. (33) | S | S | S | S | ||
| Hemodynamics measures | Apoptosis analysis | Electron microscope examination | Analysis on mitochondria | |||
| Drobnik et al. (34) | S | S | S | |||
| Determination of collagens | Determination of glycosaminoglycans | Electron microscope examination | ||||
| Repova et al. (35) | S | S | ||||
| Hemodynamics measures | Determination of collagen | |||||
| Drobnik et al. (36) | S | NS | S | |||
| Estimation of lipid peroxidation | Determination of collagen | Determination of glycosaminoglycans | ||||
| Chen et al. (37) | S | S | S | S | S | |
| Cardiac function | Hemodynamics measures | Lactate dehydrogenase | Apoptosis analysis | Immunohistochemistry | ||
| Petrosillo et al. (38) | S | S | S | S | ||
| Measurements of the infarct size | Lactate dehydrogenase | Hemodynamics measures | Analysis on mitochondria | |||
S, statistically significant; NS, not significant; CMEC, cardiac microvascular endothelial cells; IRI, ice recrystallization inhibition; qRT-PCR, quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; NO, nitric oxide; NF-ΚB, Nuclear factor-kappa B; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; MDA, malondialdehyde; LV, left ventricular.
Figure 2Representation of the SYRCLE’s risk of bias tool for animal studies. Hooijmans et al. (43).
Figure 3aMetanalysis of infarct size measurement by echocardiography (% left ventricular).
Figure 3bMetanalysis of systolic blood pressure (mmHg).
Figure 3cMetanalysis of lactate dehydrogenase (U/L).
Figure 3dMetanalysis of ejection fraction measured by echocardiography (% left ventricular).
Figure 4Risk of bias graph: review of authors’ judgment regarding each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
Figure 5Risk of bias summary: review of authors’ judgment regarding each risk of bias item for each included study.