Literature DB >> 445710

Mechanical and structural correlates of contracture induced by metabolic blockade in cardiac muscle from the rat.

O H Bing, M C Fishbein.   

Abstract

We performed morphological studies of myocardial contracture to define its nature and relationship to mechanical changes occurring during metabolic blockade. Isolated rat papillary and trabecular muscles were stretched to the apices of their length-tension curves and stimulated to contract isometrically 12 times a minute at a temperature of 28 degrees C. Incomplete and total metabolic blockade were induced by 1 hour of hypoxia (95% N2, 5% CO2) or by hypoxia plus glycolytic blockade with iodoacetic acid, 10-4M, respectively. In oxygenated control preparations, mechanical performance was stable for the 60-minute experimental period. In preparations exposed to hypoxia, developed tension fell to 7 +/- 2% of prehypoxia values at 60 minutes. Contracture tension increased progressively to 2.5 +/- 0.4 g/mm2. With total metabolic blockade, developed tension declined to zero by 10 minutes, contracture tension rose to an average peak value of 5.3 +/- 0.4 g/mm2 by 15 minutes, and subsequently slowly declined. All preparations were fixed at Lmax in the muscle bath. Light and electron microscopic studies revealed focal irregularities of A, I, and Z bands with sarcomere malalignment, hypercontraction, and fiber disruption, which increased in severity with increasing metabolic blockade. Linear densities appeared in mitochondria following total metabolic blockade, but mitochondria appeared normal otherwise. Thus, myocardial contracture after metabolic blockade is a focal process beginning within the sarcomere; morphological alterations in the contractile apparatus correlate with mechanical changes and are more severe than those in the mitochondria.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 445710     DOI: 10.1161/01.res.45.2.298

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circ Res        ISSN: 0009-7330            Impact factor:   17.367


  9 in total

1.  Occurrence and prevention of contraction bands in Purkinje fibres, transitional cells and working myocardium during global ischaemia.

Authors:  P A Schnabel; A Schmiedl; B Ramsauer; U Bartels; M M Gebhard; J Richter; H J Bretschneider
Journal:  Virchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histopathol       Date:  1990

Review 2.  Myocardial ischemia--metabolic pathways and implications of increased glycolysis.

Authors:  L H Opie
Journal:  Cardiovasc Drugs Ther       Date:  1990-08       Impact factor: 3.727

3.  Relations between the energy state of the myocardium and release of some products of anaerobic metabolism during underperfusion.

Authors:  O I Pisarenko; I M Studneva; V S Shulzhenko; V I Kapelko
Journal:  Pflugers Arch       Date:  1990-06       Impact factor: 3.657

4.  Ultrastructural correlates of ischaemic contracture during global subtotal ischaemia in the rat heart.

Authors:  I S Harper; E van der Merwe; P Owen; L H Opie
Journal:  J Exp Pathol (Oxford)       Date:  1990-04

5.  Diastolic tension of rat cardiac muscle during deficiency of oxygen and glucose. Stress-strain relationships and reversibility.

Authors:  C Holubarsch; R Jacob
Journal:  Basic Res Cardiol       Date:  1981 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 17.165

6.  Force generation in experimental tetanus, KCl contracture, and oxygen and glucose deficiency contracture in mammalian myocardium.

Authors:  C Holubarsch
Journal:  Pflugers Arch       Date:  1983-03       Impact factor: 3.657

7.  The effect of coronary pressure on contracture and vascular perfusion in the hypoxic isolated rat heart.

Authors:  S M Humphrey; J B Gavin
Journal:  Basic Res Cardiol       Date:  1984 May-Jun       Impact factor: 17.165

8.  Myocardial elasticity and left ventricular distensibility as related to oxygen deficiency and right ventricular filling. Analysis in a rat heart model.

Authors:  M Vogt; R Jacob
Journal:  Basic Res Cardiol       Date:  1985 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 17.165

9.  In vitro model of ischemic heart failure using human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes.

Authors:  Justin Davis; Ahmad Chouman; Jeffery Creech; Andre Monteiro da Rocha; Daniela Ponce-Balbuena; Eric N Jimenez Vazquez; Ruthann Nichols; Andrey Lozhkin; Nageswara R Madamanchi; Katherine F Campbell; Todd J Herron
Journal:  JCI Insight       Date:  2021-05-24
  9 in total

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