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Impact of Thoracic Surgery on Cardiac Morphology and Function in Small Animal Models of Heart Disease: A Cardiac MRI Study in Rats

BACKGROUND: Surgical procedures in small animal models of heart disease might evoke alterations in cardiac morphology and function. The aim of this study was to reveal and quantify such potential artificial early or long term effects in vivo, which might account for a significant bias in basic cardi...

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Autores principales: Nordbeck, Peter, Bönhof, Leoni, Hiller, Karl-Heinz, Voll, Sabine, Arias-Loza, Paula, Seidlmayer, Lea, Williams, Tatjana, Ye, Yu-Xiang, Gensler, Daniel, Pelzer, Theo, Ertl, Georg, Jakob, Peter M., Bauer, Wolfgang R., Ritter, Oliver
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3749142/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23990872
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0068275
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author Nordbeck, Peter
Bönhof, Leoni
Hiller, Karl-Heinz
Voll, Sabine
Arias-Loza, Paula
Seidlmayer, Lea
Williams, Tatjana
Ye, Yu-Xiang
Gensler, Daniel
Pelzer, Theo
Ertl, Georg
Jakob, Peter M.
Bauer, Wolfgang R.
Ritter, Oliver
author_facet Nordbeck, Peter
Bönhof, Leoni
Hiller, Karl-Heinz
Voll, Sabine
Arias-Loza, Paula
Seidlmayer, Lea
Williams, Tatjana
Ye, Yu-Xiang
Gensler, Daniel
Pelzer, Theo
Ertl, Georg
Jakob, Peter M.
Bauer, Wolfgang R.
Ritter, Oliver
author_sort Nordbeck, Peter
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Surgical procedures in small animal models of heart disease might evoke alterations in cardiac morphology and function. The aim of this study was to reveal and quantify such potential artificial early or long term effects in vivo, which might account for a significant bias in basic cardiovascular research, and, therefore, could potentially question the meaning of respective studies. METHODS: Female Wistar rats (n = 6 per group) were matched for weight and assorted for sham left coronary artery ligation or control. Cardiac morphology and function was then investigated in vivo by cine magnetic resonance imaging at 7 Tesla 1 and 8 weeks after the surgical procedure. The time course of metabolic and inflammatory blood parameters was determined in addition. RESULTS: Compared to healthy controls, rats after sham surgery showed a lower body weight both 1 week (267.5±10.6 vs. 317.0±11.3 g, n<0.05) and 8 weeks (317.0±21.1 vs. 358.7±22.4 g, n<0.05) after the intervention. Left and right ventricular morphology and function were not different in absolute measures in both groups 1 week after surgery. However, there was a confined difference in several cardiac parameters normalized to the body weight (bw), such as myocardial mass (2.19±0.30/0.83±0.13 vs. 1.85±0.22/0.70±0.07 mg left/right per g bw, p<0.05), or enddiastolic ventricular volume (1.31±0.36/1.21±0.31 vs. 1.14±0.20/1.07±0.17 µl left/right per g bw, p<0.05). Vice versa, after 8 weeks, cardiac masses, volumes, and output showed a trend for lower values in sham operated rats compared to controls in absolute measures (782.2±57.2/260.2±33.2 vs. 805.9±84.8/310.4±48.5 mg, p<0.05 for left/right ventricular mass), but not normalized to body weight. Matching these findings, blood testing revealed only minor inflammatory but prolonged metabolic changes after surgery not related to cardiac disease. CONCLUSION: Cardio-thoracic surgical procedures in experimental myocardial infarction cause distinct alterations upon the global integrity of the organism, which in the long term also induce circumscribed repercussions on cardiac morphology and function. This impact has to be considered when analyzing data from respective animal studies and transferring these findings to conditions in patients.
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spelling pubmed-37491422013-08-29 Impact of Thoracic Surgery on Cardiac Morphology and Function in Small Animal Models of Heart Disease: A Cardiac MRI Study in Rats Nordbeck, Peter Bönhof, Leoni Hiller, Karl-Heinz Voll, Sabine Arias-Loza, Paula Seidlmayer, Lea Williams, Tatjana Ye, Yu-Xiang Gensler, Daniel Pelzer, Theo Ertl, Georg Jakob, Peter M. Bauer, Wolfgang R. Ritter, Oliver PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Surgical procedures in small animal models of heart disease might evoke alterations in cardiac morphology and function. The aim of this study was to reveal and quantify such potential artificial early or long term effects in vivo, which might account for a significant bias in basic cardiovascular research, and, therefore, could potentially question the meaning of respective studies. METHODS: Female Wistar rats (n = 6 per group) were matched for weight and assorted for sham left coronary artery ligation or control. Cardiac morphology and function was then investigated in vivo by cine magnetic resonance imaging at 7 Tesla 1 and 8 weeks after the surgical procedure. The time course of metabolic and inflammatory blood parameters was determined in addition. RESULTS: Compared to healthy controls, rats after sham surgery showed a lower body weight both 1 week (267.5±10.6 vs. 317.0±11.3 g, n<0.05) and 8 weeks (317.0±21.1 vs. 358.7±22.4 g, n<0.05) after the intervention. Left and right ventricular morphology and function were not different in absolute measures in both groups 1 week after surgery. However, there was a confined difference in several cardiac parameters normalized to the body weight (bw), such as myocardial mass (2.19±0.30/0.83±0.13 vs. 1.85±0.22/0.70±0.07 mg left/right per g bw, p<0.05), or enddiastolic ventricular volume (1.31±0.36/1.21±0.31 vs. 1.14±0.20/1.07±0.17 µl left/right per g bw, p<0.05). Vice versa, after 8 weeks, cardiac masses, volumes, and output showed a trend for lower values in sham operated rats compared to controls in absolute measures (782.2±57.2/260.2±33.2 vs. 805.9±84.8/310.4±48.5 mg, p<0.05 for left/right ventricular mass), but not normalized to body weight. Matching these findings, blood testing revealed only minor inflammatory but prolonged metabolic changes after surgery not related to cardiac disease. CONCLUSION: Cardio-thoracic surgical procedures in experimental myocardial infarction cause distinct alterations upon the global integrity of the organism, which in the long term also induce circumscribed repercussions on cardiac morphology and function. This impact has to be considered when analyzing data from respective animal studies and transferring these findings to conditions in patients. Public Library of Science 2013-08-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3749142/ /pubmed/23990872 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0068275 Text en © 2013 Nordbeck et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nordbeck, Peter
Bönhof, Leoni
Hiller, Karl-Heinz
Voll, Sabine
Arias-Loza, Paula
Seidlmayer, Lea
Williams, Tatjana
Ye, Yu-Xiang
Gensler, Daniel
Pelzer, Theo
Ertl, Georg
Jakob, Peter M.
Bauer, Wolfgang R.
Ritter, Oliver
Impact of Thoracic Surgery on Cardiac Morphology and Function in Small Animal Models of Heart Disease: A Cardiac MRI Study in Rats
title Impact of Thoracic Surgery on Cardiac Morphology and Function in Small Animal Models of Heart Disease: A Cardiac MRI Study in Rats
title_full Impact of Thoracic Surgery on Cardiac Morphology and Function in Small Animal Models of Heart Disease: A Cardiac MRI Study in Rats
title_fullStr Impact of Thoracic Surgery on Cardiac Morphology and Function in Small Animal Models of Heart Disease: A Cardiac MRI Study in Rats
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Thoracic Surgery on Cardiac Morphology and Function in Small Animal Models of Heart Disease: A Cardiac MRI Study in Rats
title_short Impact of Thoracic Surgery on Cardiac Morphology and Function in Small Animal Models of Heart Disease: A Cardiac MRI Study in Rats
title_sort impact of thoracic surgery on cardiac morphology and function in small animal models of heart disease: a cardiac mri study in rats
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3749142/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23990872
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0068275
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