Abstract

To further investigate length-dependent force generation in human heart, nonfailing (donor hearts, NF) and terminally failing (heart transplants, dilated cardiomyopathy, DCM) left ventricular myocardium was studied under various preload (4-40 mN/mm2) or length conditions. In addition, morphological studies (van Giesson Trichrome staining, electron microscopy) were performed. In NF, a biphasic increase in force of contraction (FOC) was observed after elevating the preload (4-40 mN/mm2): there was an immediate fast increase (FOCf,), followed by a slow increase over several minutes (FOCs), which was paralleled by an increase in the systolic fura-2 transient. In DCM, FOCf, FOCs and the systolic fura-2 transient were blunted and diastolic tension was increased at increasing muscle length. Only in NF, a stretched induced increase in diastolic fura-2 ratio was observed. In DCM, no obvious interstitial fibrosis and no difference in basement membrane structure and attachment were observed. Since FOCf has been attributed to the Frank-Starling mechanism, whereas FOCs represents a length-dependent increase in the intracellular Ca2+-transient, the impaired length-dependent force generation in failing myocardium results from a dysregulation of both myofibrillar Ca2+-sensitivity as well as the intracellular Ca2+-homeostasis. Interstitial fibrosis may have only minor impact on force generation in human end-stage heart failure.

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