Intracardiac lipid accumulation, lipoatrophy of muscle cells and expansion of myocardial infarction in type 2 diabetic patients

The overall mortality of diabetic patients after myocardial infarction is 3–4 times higher than non-diabetics. The cellular mechanisms underlying such a poor clinical prognosis remain incompletely understood. Recent reports suggest that lipotoxicity associated with impaired liporegulation is among t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Micron (Oxford, England : 1993) England : 1993), 2008-10, Vol.39 (7), p.944-951
Hauptverfasser: Borisov, Andrei B., Ushakov, Alexei V., Zagorulko, Aleksandr K., Novikov, Nikolai Y., Selivanova, Ksenia F., Edwards, Chris A., Russell, Mark W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The overall mortality of diabetic patients after myocardial infarction is 3–4 times higher than non-diabetics. The cellular mechanisms underlying such a poor clinical prognosis remain incompletely understood. Recent reports suggest that lipotoxicity associated with impaired liporegulation is among the leading factors in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes. The goal of this study was to investigate whether excess lipid accumulation specifically in heart muscle cells contributes to the expansion of myocardial infarction in type 2 diabetic patients. Comparative structural analysis of cardiac tissue was performed on autopsy samples from the infracted hearts of diabetic and non-diabetic individuals with special reference to the expansion of the infarction, degenerative changes, lipoatrophy, cell death, and replacement fibrosis. We found that progressive accumulation of lipids in cardiac myocytes was accompanied by considerable loss of myofibrils and was frequently observed in the heart tissue of type 2 diabetic patients. This indicates that disassembly of the contractile apparatus in the cells infiltrated with lipids weakens their capability for functional activity. Analysis of degenerative changes in the diabetic tissue has shown that lipid-laden cardiac myocytes were more susceptible to necrotic and apoptotic cells death leading to expansion of the infarction and the development of progressive focal replacement fibrosis both in the perinecrotic zone and in the areas located far from the site of injury. Our data show that lipoatrophy and loss of muscle cells during the post-infarction period aggravate the functional impairment in the diabetic heart and limits its adaptive capacity for compensatory remodeling. This suggests that lipotoxic myocardial injury associated with defects of lipid metabolism in type 2 diabetes predisposes its evolution toward congestive heart failure and is an important factor contributing to a high mortality following infarction.
ISSN:0968-4328
1878-4291
DOI:10.1016/j.micron.2007.11.002