Abstract

Augmented mortality and morbidity following an acute myocardial infarction in patients with diabetes mellitus Type 2 (T2DM) may be caused by increased sensitivity to ischemia reperfusion (IR) injury or altered activation of endogenous cardioprotective pathways modified by T2DM per se or ischemic preconditioning (IPC). We aimed to investigate, whether the duration of T2DM influences sensitivity against IR injury and the efficacy of IPC, and how myocardial glucose oxidation rate was involved. Male Zucker diabetic fatty rats (homozygote (fa/fa)) at ages 6-(prediabetic), 12- (onset diabetes) and 24-weeks of age (late diabetes) and their age-matched non-diabetic controls (heterozygote (fa/+) were subjected to IR injury in the Langendorff model and randomised to IPC stimulus or control. T2DM rats were endogenously protected at onset of diabetes, as infarct size was lower in 12-weeks T2DM animals than in 6- (35±2% vs 53±4%; P = 0.006) and 24-weeks animals (35±2% vs 72±4%; P<0.0001). IPC reduced infarct size in all groups irrespective of the presence of T2DM and its duration (32±3%; 20±2%; 36±4% respectively; (ANOVA P<0.0001). Compared to prediabetic rats, myocardial glucose oxidation rates were reduced during stabilisation and early reperfusion at onset of T2DM, but these animals retained the ability to increase oxidation rate in late reperfusion. Late diabetic rats had low glucose oxidation rates throughout stabilisation and reperfusion. Despite inherent differences in sensitivity to IR injury, the cardioprotective effect of IPC was preserved in our animal model of pre-, early and late stage T2DM and associated with adaptations to myocardial glucose oxidation capacity.

Highlights

  • Ischemic heart disease (IHD) is the leading cause of death worldwide

  • To investigate whether the efficacy of exogenously applied ischemic preconditioning (IPC) was influenced by the duration of T2DM, we studied infarct size, hemodynamics, glucose oxidation and whether the efficacy of IPC was reflected in changes in interstitial succinate concentrations, a key mediator of ischemia reperfusion (IR) injury[20], in a Zucker diabetic fatty rat model of T2DM

  • Plasma-cholesterol concentrations increased with age in T2DM rats and were higher at all ages than their non-DM controls

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Summary

Introduction

Ischemic heart disease (IHD) is the leading cause of death worldwide. A serious manifestation of IHD is acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Patients with T2DM have an increased prevalence of IHD, and increased mortality and morbidity following AMI, mainly due to an increased incidence of post infarction heart failure[1].

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