A Mechanistic Analysis of Reduced Mechanical Performance in Human Heart Failure

2004 | journal article

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​A Mechanistic Analysis of Reduced Mechanical Performance in Human Heart Failure​
Alpert, N. R.; Hasenfuss, G. ; Leavitt, B. J.; Ittleman, F. P.; Pieske, B. M.   & Mulieri, L. A.​ (2004) 
Japanese Heart Journal41(2) pp. 103​-116​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1536/jhj.41.103 

Documents & Media

document.pdf115.19 kBAdobe PDF

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Alpert, Norman R.; Hasenfuss, Gerd ; Leavitt, Bruce J.; Ittleman, Frank P.; Pieske, Burkert M. ; Mulieri, Louis A.
Abstract
In failing human hearts (FHH) (NYHA IV) the cardiac output is inadequate to meet the metabolic needs of the peripheral systems. By means of thermo-mechanical analysis we have shown that epicardial strips from FHH (37 °C) have a depressed tension independent heat (TIH) and tension independent heat rate (dTIH/dt) liberation that correlates with depression in peak isometric force and the rate of relaxation. Furthermore, in response to a change in frequency of stimulation, FHH shows a severe blunting of the force-frequency relationship resulting in a decrease in myocardial reserve and in the frequency at which optimum force is obtained. We used ventricular ANF as an index of the severity of myocardial disease and demonstrated an inverse relationship between ANF mRNA and the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) calcium cycling proteins (SERCA 2, Phospholamban, Ryanodine Receptor) while these latter proteins all had a positive correlation with each other. At the same time there was an increase in sarcolemmal sodium calcium exchange protein. The decrease in SR pump proteins correlates with the decrease in myocardial reserve and optimum frequency of contraction. The latter mechanical changes are explainable in terms of a frequency dependent decrease in calcium concentration (aequorin light) in FHH.
Issue Date
2004
Journal
Japanese Heart Journal 
ISSN
0021-4868
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media