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Histo-anatomical structure of the living isolated rat heart in two contraction states assessed by diffusion tensor MRI

Deformation and wall-thickening of ventricular myocardium are essential for cardiac pump function. However, insight into the histo-anatomical basis for cardiac tissue re-arrangement during contraction is limited. In this report, we describe dynamic changes in regionally prevailing cardiomyocyte (fib...

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Autores principales: Hales, Patrick W., Schneider, Jürgen E., Burton, Rebecca A.B., Wright, Benjamin J., Bollensdorff, Christian, Kohl, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pergamon Press 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3526796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23043978
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2012.07.014
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author Hales, Patrick W.
Schneider, Jürgen E.
Burton, Rebecca A.B.
Wright, Benjamin J.
Bollensdorff, Christian
Kohl, Peter
author_facet Hales, Patrick W.
Schneider, Jürgen E.
Burton, Rebecca A.B.
Wright, Benjamin J.
Bollensdorff, Christian
Kohl, Peter
author_sort Hales, Patrick W.
collection PubMed
description Deformation and wall-thickening of ventricular myocardium are essential for cardiac pump function. However, insight into the histo-anatomical basis for cardiac tissue re-arrangement during contraction is limited. In this report, we describe dynamic changes in regionally prevailing cardiomyocyte (fibre) and myolaminar (sheet) orientations, using Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) of ventricles in the same living heart in two different mechanical states. Hearts, isolated from Sprague–Dawley rats, were Langendorff-perfused and imaged, initially in their slack state during cardioplegic arrest, then during lithium-induced contracture. Regional fibre- and sheet-orientations were derived from DTI-data on a voxel-wise basis. Contraction was accompanied with a decrease in left-handed helical fibres (handedness relative to the baso-apical direction) in basal, equatorial, and apical sub-epicardium (by 14.0%, 17.3%, 15.8% respectively; p < 0.001), and an increase in right-handed helical fibres of the sub-endocardium (by 11.0%, 12.1% and 16.1%, respectively; p < 0.001). Two predominant sheet-populations were observed, with sheet-angles of either positive (β+) or negative (β−) polarity relative to a ‘chamber-horizontal plane’ (defined as normal to the left ventricular long-axis). In contracture, mean ‘intersection’-angle (geometrically quantifiable intersection of sheet-angle projections) between β+ and β− sheet-populations increased from 86.2 ± 5.5° (slack) to 108.3 ± 5.4° (p < 0.001). Subsequent high-resolution DTI of fixed myocardium, and histological sectioning, reconfirmed the existence of alternating sheet-plane populations. Our results suggest that myocardial tissue layers in alternating sheet-populations align into a more chamber-horizontal orientation during contraction. This re-arrangement occurs via an accordion-like mechanism that, combined with inter-sheet slippage, can significantly contribute to ventricular deformation, including wall-thickening in a predominantly centripetal direction and baso-apical shortening.
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spelling pubmed-35267962012-12-24 Histo-anatomical structure of the living isolated rat heart in two contraction states assessed by diffusion tensor MRI Hales, Patrick W. Schneider, Jürgen E. Burton, Rebecca A.B. Wright, Benjamin J. Bollensdorff, Christian Kohl, Peter Prog Biophys Mol Biol Original Research Deformation and wall-thickening of ventricular myocardium are essential for cardiac pump function. However, insight into the histo-anatomical basis for cardiac tissue re-arrangement during contraction is limited. In this report, we describe dynamic changes in regionally prevailing cardiomyocyte (fibre) and myolaminar (sheet) orientations, using Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) of ventricles in the same living heart in two different mechanical states. Hearts, isolated from Sprague–Dawley rats, were Langendorff-perfused and imaged, initially in their slack state during cardioplegic arrest, then during lithium-induced contracture. Regional fibre- and sheet-orientations were derived from DTI-data on a voxel-wise basis. Contraction was accompanied with a decrease in left-handed helical fibres (handedness relative to the baso-apical direction) in basal, equatorial, and apical sub-epicardium (by 14.0%, 17.3%, 15.8% respectively; p < 0.001), and an increase in right-handed helical fibres of the sub-endocardium (by 11.0%, 12.1% and 16.1%, respectively; p < 0.001). Two predominant sheet-populations were observed, with sheet-angles of either positive (β+) or negative (β−) polarity relative to a ‘chamber-horizontal plane’ (defined as normal to the left ventricular long-axis). In contracture, mean ‘intersection’-angle (geometrically quantifiable intersection of sheet-angle projections) between β+ and β− sheet-populations increased from 86.2 ± 5.5° (slack) to 108.3 ± 5.4° (p < 0.001). Subsequent high-resolution DTI of fixed myocardium, and histological sectioning, reconfirmed the existence of alternating sheet-plane populations. Our results suggest that myocardial tissue layers in alternating sheet-populations align into a more chamber-horizontal orientation during contraction. This re-arrangement occurs via an accordion-like mechanism that, combined with inter-sheet slippage, can significantly contribute to ventricular deformation, including wall-thickening in a predominantly centripetal direction and baso-apical shortening. Pergamon Press 2012-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3526796/ /pubmed/23043978 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2012.07.014 Text en © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Open Access under CC BY 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) license
spellingShingle Original Research
Hales, Patrick W.
Schneider, Jürgen E.
Burton, Rebecca A.B.
Wright, Benjamin J.
Bollensdorff, Christian
Kohl, Peter
Histo-anatomical structure of the living isolated rat heart in two contraction states assessed by diffusion tensor MRI
title Histo-anatomical structure of the living isolated rat heart in two contraction states assessed by diffusion tensor MRI
title_full Histo-anatomical structure of the living isolated rat heart in two contraction states assessed by diffusion tensor MRI
title_fullStr Histo-anatomical structure of the living isolated rat heart in two contraction states assessed by diffusion tensor MRI
title_full_unstemmed Histo-anatomical structure of the living isolated rat heart in two contraction states assessed by diffusion tensor MRI
title_short Histo-anatomical structure of the living isolated rat heart in two contraction states assessed by diffusion tensor MRI
title_sort histo-anatomical structure of the living isolated rat heart in two contraction states assessed by diffusion tensor mri
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3526796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23043978
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2012.07.014
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