Morphological and Functional Changes in the Rat Heart after X Irradiation: Strain Differences

The hearts of mature male rats of the Wistar and Sprague-Dawley strains were locally irradiated with single doses of 17.5 and 20.0 Gy of X rays, respectively. These two dose levels had previously been shown to result in a comparable latent period between irradiation and the death of rats of these tw...

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Veröffentlicht in:Radiation research 1989-09, Vol.119 (3), p.489-499
Hauptverfasser: Yeung, T. K., Lauk, S., Simmonds, R. H., Hopewell, J. W., K.-R. Trott
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The hearts of mature male rats of the Wistar and Sprague-Dawley strains were locally irradiated with single doses of 17.5 and 20.0 Gy of X rays, respectively. These two dose levels had previously been shown to result in a comparable latent period between irradiation and the death of rats of these two strains from cardiac failure. Morphological changes in the myocardium and modifications in cardiac function were assessed in the animals at 28, 70, and 100 days after irradiation. The first radiation-induced change which was observed in the myocardium was a rapid decline in capillary density and a loss of alkaline phosphatase activity by the capillary endothelial cells. The capillary density was reduced to ∼50% of that of unirradiated control values at 28 days and to ∼40% of the control values between 70 and 100 days after irradiation. The loss of enzyme activity was also detected at 28 days. Examination of histological sections showed an increase by 70 days in the areas with negative enzyme activity up to ∼70% of the myocardium. The reduction in capillary density and the loss of enzyme activity occurred before any marked pathological changes were seen in the myocardium. The pathological lesions seen in the myocardium at 100 days after irradiation were qualitatively and quantitatively the same in the two strains of rat. Measurements of cardiac output in Sprague-Dawley rats showed a gradual decline in output after irradiation; however, measurements in Wistar rats showed a progressive increase in cardiac output over the same period of time. It was shown by rubidium extraction that there was an increase in the percentage of the total cardiac output distributed to the ventricular muscle of Sprague-Dawley rats, while similar measurements in Wistar rats showed no significant change. In spite of the marked strain differences observed in cardiac output and rubidium extraction, blood perfusion per gram of ventricular muscle was apparently not modified in both strains of rat after irradiation. These findings indicated that the correlation between morphological effects after irradiation and the functional expression of damage is highly complex.
ISSN:0033-7587
1938-5404
DOI:10.2307/3577520