Structural analysis of pressure versus volume overload hypertrophy of cat right ventricle
T. A. Marino, R. L. Kent, C. E. Uboh, E. Fernandez, E. W. Thompson and G. Cooper 4th Pressure overload of cat right ventricle causes progressive abnormalities of in vitro contractile function at a time when in vivo contractile function is normal. In marked contrast, the same degree and duration of v...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology 1985-08, Vol.249 (2), p.H371-H379 |
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Zusammenfassung: | T. A. Marino, R. L. Kent, C. E. Uboh, E. Fernandez, E. W. Thompson and G. Cooper 4th
Pressure overload of cat right ventricle causes progressive abnormalities
of in vitro contractile function at a time when in vivo contractile
function is normal. In marked contrast, the same degree and duration of
volume overload of cat right ventricle results in neither in vitro nor in
vivo contractile dysfunction. The purpose of the present quantitative
structural study was to determine whether there were any histological
alterations in pressure-overloaded myocardium that might be causally
related to the contractile dysfunction found only in this model. Four
experimental groups of eight cats each were studied: a group with pulmonary
arterial banding to create a pressure overload, sham-operated controls for
this group, a group with atrial septal defects to create a volume overload,
and sham-operated controls for this group. Seven to ten weeks after each
operative procedure, right ventricular pressure was elevated only in the
pressure-overloaded group, pulmonary-to-systemic blood flow ratio was
increased only in the volume-overloaded group, and right ventricle-to-body
weight ratio was significantly and comparably increased in both the
pressure- and the volume-overloaded groups. There was a single striking
histological distinction between myocardium hypertrophying in response to
pressure as opposed to volume overload: the volume density of cardiocytes
in papillary muscles from pressure-overloaded right ventricles was
decreased significantly with a proportional increase in connective tissue.
Given the critical importance of these two myocardial components to both
systolic and diastolic cardiac function, these data provide a potential
structural basis for at least some of the functional abnormalities observed
in pressure but not in volume overload hypertrophy of the cat right
ventricle. |
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ISSN: | 0363-6135 0002-9513 1522-1539 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpheart.1985.249.2.H371 |