Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Susceptibility to systolic dysfunction in the myocardium from chronically infarcted spontaneously hypertensive rats.

We explored whether the hypertensive heart is susceptible to myocardial dysfunction in viable noninfarcted tissue post-myocardial infarction (MI), the potential mechanisms thereof, and the impact of these changes on pump function. Six to seven months after the ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery, left ventricular (LV) myocardial systolic function, as assessed from the percent shortening of the noninfarcted lateral wall segmental length determined over a range of filling pressures (ultrasonic transducers placed in the lateral wall in anaesthetized, open-chest, ventilated rats) and the percent thickening of the posterior wall (echocardiography), was reduced in infarcted spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHR-MI) (P < 0.05) but not in normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY-MI) animals compared with corresponding controls [SHR-sham operations (Sham) and WKY-Sham]. This change in the regional myocardial function in SHR-MI, but not in WKY-MI, occurred despite a similar degree of LV dilatation (increased LV end-diastolic dimensions and volume intercept of the LV end-diastolic pressure-volume relation) in SHR-MI and WKY-MI rats and a lack of difference in LV relative wall thinning, LV wall stress, apoptosis [terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase biotin-dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL)], or necrosis (pathological score) between SHR-MI and WKY-MI rats. Although the change in regional myocardial function in the SHR-MI group was not associated with a greater reduction in baseline global LV chamber systolic function [end-systolic elastance (LV E(es)) and endocardial fractional shortening determined in the absence of an adrenergic stimulus], in the presence of an isoproterenol challenge, noninfarct-zone LV systolic myocardial dysfunction manifested in a significant reduction in LV E(es) in SHR-MI compared with WKY-MI and SHR and WKY-Sham rats (P < 0.04). In conclusion, these data suggest that with chronic MI, the hypertensive heart is susceptible to the development of myocardial dysfunction, a change that cannot be attributed to excessive chamber dilatation, apoptosis, or necrosis, but which in turn contributes toward a reduced cardiac adrenergic inotropic reserve.

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