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Effects of a high-fat diet on intracellular calcium (Ca2+) handling and cardiac remodeling in Wistar rats without hyperlipidemia.

A high-fat diet is often associated with cardiovascular diseases. Research has suggested that consumption of a high-fat diet for 10 weeks is associated with cardiac dysfunction, including arrhythmias, through alterations in cardiac remodeling and myocardial intracellular calcium (Ca2+ ) handling. In this study, rats were randomly divided into two groups: the standard diet (N = 5) and high-fat diet (N = 5) groups. To evaluate the effects of a high-fat diet on cardiac remodeling, we investigated the myocardium obtained from male Wistar rats fed a high-fat diet or standard diet for ten weeks via scanning electron microscopy, polarization microscopy, and RT-PCR. We found that compared with the standard diet cohort, the high-fat diet cohort exhibited increased levels of SERCA2a and SERCA2b mRNA and a decreased level of PLB mRNA ( P < .05). These findings showed that a high-fat diet may lead to cardiac upregulation of Ca2+ transport-related genes in the sarcoplasmic reticulum. Additionally, we observed endocardial injury accompanied by focal dense layered collagen, increased spacing between endocardial cells that was often filled with collagen debris, and increased amounts of collagen fibers among enlarged cardiomyocytes in the high-fat diet cohort. The abnormal intracellular calcium (Ca2+ ) handling and cardiac remodeling may be contributing factors in arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death in high-fat diet-fed rats.

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