Abstract

Cardiac energy metabolism of pressure-overloaded rat hearts was examined under in vivo and in vitro conditions. Two, 4 and 6 weeks after constriction of the abdominal artery, the hemodynamic and metabolic profiles of hearts in vivo and of perfused hearts were determined. Significant increases in left ventricular weight/body weight (30 to 45% increase relative to the sham group), systolic and diastolic blood pressure (22 to 33% increase) and pressure-rate product (31 to 33% increase) were observed 2, 4 and 6 weeks after the operation, and a slight but significant decrease in heart rate was observed at 2 weeks after the operation. Tissue hydroxyproline content increased (17 to 93%) with time after pressure-overload. These findings are indicators of pressure-overloaded cardiac hypertrophy. The total high-energy phosphates of the in vivo rat myocardium under artificial respiration were lower than those of sham-operated rat myocardium 2 (23%) and 4 weeks (21%), but not 6 weeks after aortic constriction. The maximal oxygen consumption rates of mitochondria, when determined in the skinned cardiac fibers, also decreased 2 (47%) and 4 weeks (36%), but reversed 6 weeks after pressure-overload. However, the myocardial ATP, a utilizing form of high-energy phosphate, of pressure-overloaded rat myocardium remained normal at all times after cardiac hypertrophy. This suggests that alterations in hemodynamic variables of in vivo pressure-overloaded rats may not be attributable to a reduction in the myocardial energy production. In the perfused hearts isolated from pressure-overloaded rats, tissue ATP levels were similar to those of sham-operated rats, although the tissue creatine phosphate tended to be reduced in the pressure-overloaded animals at all stages of cardiac hypertrophy examined. Only a marginal decrease in the tissue high-energy phosphate (13%) was observed 4 weeks after the operation relative to that of sham-operated rats. In contrast, the developed tension of the perfused pressure-overloaded rat hearts was consistently lower (27 to 36%) than that of the sham-operated rat hearts. The results suggest that the high-energy phosphate levels of pressure-overloaded rat myocardium in vitro are unlikely to account for the observed decline in cardiac contractile function. The reduction of myocardial high-energy phosphates of pressure overloaded rats may be due to an adaptative change rather than a causal events.

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