Literature DB >> 6449858

Constituents of the human ventricular myocardium: connective tissue hyperplasia accompanying muscular hypertrophy.

G W Moore, G M Hutchins, B H Bulkley, J S Tseng, P F Ki.   

Abstract

Left-sided congestive heart failure may be secondary to decreased left ventricular myocardial compliance in some patients. To investigate the anatomic basis for altered wall stiffness, morphometric determinations of muscle cell nuclear density and percent of myocardium consisting of muscle cells were made for right and left ventricular free wall and septum in 127 hearts with normal coronary arteries. The hearts were normal (33 patients), had left ventricular hypertrophy (28 patients), right ventricular hypertrophy (25 patients), or chronic dilatation (41 patients). With cardiac enlargement, the average percent of myocardium consisting of muscle did not change from the approximately 75% value characteristic of normal hearts. In contrast, muscle cell nuclear density decreased proportionate to cardiac enlargement, demonstrating that muscle cell hypertrophy, not hyperplasia, is the basis for weight increase. Some hearts with marked longstanding dilatation also had perivascular and interstitital "striae" of connective tissue differing from replacement fibrosis. An increase in epicardial coronary artery caliber commensurate with increased heart weight suggests that ischemia is not the basis of connective tissue increase. The results show that cardiac muscle cell hypertrophy is accompanied by commensurate increase in interstitial connective tissues. This pattern of myocardial growth with cardiac enlargement may produce increased myocardial stiffness simply as a result of increased wall thickness, and may lead to left-sided congestive heart failure.

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Year:  1980        PMID: 6449858     DOI: 10.1016/0002-8703(80)90224-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Heart J        ISSN: 0002-8703            Impact factor:   4.749


  7 in total

1.  Genetic modification of survival in tissue-specific knockout mice with mitochondrial cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  H Li; J Wang; H Wilhelmsson; A Hansson; P Thoren; J Duffy; P Rustin; N G Larsson
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2000-03-28       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Abnormal diastolic function in patients with type 1 diabetes and early nephropathy.

Authors:  M J Sampson; J B Chambers; D C Sprigings; P L Drury
Journal:  Br Heart J       Date:  1990-10

3.  Myocardial hydroxyproline and mechanical response to prolonged pressure loading followed by unloading in the cat.

Authors:  J F Williams; B Mathew; D L Hern; R D Potter; W P Deiss
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1983-12       Impact factor: 14.808

4.  Relation between regional echo intensity and myocardial connective tissue in chronic left ventricular disease.

Authors:  T R Shaw; R B Logan-Sinclair; C Surin; R J McAnulty; B Heard; G J Laurent; D G Gibson
Journal:  Br Heart J       Date:  1984-01

5.  Relation of regional echo amplitude to left ventricular function and the electrocardiogram in left ventricular hypertrophy.

Authors:  L M Shapiro; R B Moore; R B Logan-Sinclair; D G Gibson
Journal:  Br Heart J       Date:  1984-07

6.  Architecture of myocardial cells in human cardiac ventricles with concentric and eccentric hypertrophy as demonstrated by quantitative scanning electron microscopy.

Authors:  K Sawada; K Kawamura
Journal:  Heart Vessels       Date:  1991       Impact factor: 2.037

7.  Repression of miR-142 by p300 and MAPK is required for survival signalling via gp130 during adaptive hypertrophy.

Authors:  Salil Sharma; Jing Liu; Jianqin Wei; Huijun Yuan; Taifang Zhang; Nanette H Bishopric
Journal:  EMBO Mol Med       Date:  2012-04-24       Impact factor: 12.137

  7 in total

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