Abstract

BackgroundCardiovascular disease increases with age in both sexes. Treatment can require cardiac surgery, where the hearts are pre-treated with protective cardioplegic solution before ischemia and reperfusion (I/R). While endogenous estrogen is beneficial in I/R, whether testosterone is involved is uncertain and whether age modifies responses to I/R is unclear. We investigated sex- and age-specific differences in I/R injury in the hearts pre-treated with clinically relevant cardioplegic solution.MethodsThe hearts were isolated from young (6–9 months) and old (20–28 months) mice of both sexes and perfused (Langendorff) with Krebs-Henseleit buffer (15 min, 37 °C), followed by St. Thomas’ two cardioplegia (6 min, 6–7 °C), global ischemia (90 min, 23–24 °C), and reperfusion (30 min, 37 °C). The hearts were perfused with triphenyltetrazolium chloride to quantify infarct area. Testosterone’s role was investigated in gonadectomized (GDX, 6–9 months) male mice; serum testosterone and estradiol were measured with ELISA assays.ResultsLeft ventricular developed pressure (LVDP) recovered to 67.3 ± 7.4% in the old compared to 21.8 ± 9.2% in the young male hearts (p < 0.05). Similar results were seen for rates of pressure development (+dP/dt) and decay (−dP/dt). Infarct areas were smaller in the old male hearts (16.6 ± 1.6%) than in the younger hearts (55.8 ± 1.2%, p < 0.05). By contrast, the hearts from young and old females exhibited a similar post-ischemic functional recovery and no age-dependent difference in infarcts. There was a sex difference in the young group, where ventricular function (LVDP, +dP/dt, −dP/dt) recovered better and infarcts were smaller in females than males. Estradiol levels were highest in young females. Testosterone was high in young males but low in females and old males, which suggested beneficial effects of low testosterone. Indeed, the hearts from GDX males exhibited much better recovery of LVDP in reperfusion than that from intact males (values were 64.4 ± 7.5 % vs. 21.8 ± 9.2%; p < 0.05). The GDX hearts also had smaller infarcts than the hearts from intact males (p < 0.05).ConclusionsAlthough age had no effect on susceptibility to I/R injury after cardioplegic arrest in females, it actually protected against injury in older males. Our findings indicate that low testosterone may be protective against I/R injury following cardioplegic arrest in older males.

Highlights

  • Cardiovascular disease increases with age in both sexes

  • Reperfusion contractures were markedly attenuated by GDX (Fig. 10b), consistent with reduced myocardial injury in reperfusion in the GDX animals. These results demonstrate that the hearts from young GDX mice with very low testosterone levels exhibited much better functional recovery and less myocardial injury after cardioplegia followed by ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) when compared to the hearts from young mice with normal testosterone levels

  • We found that serum testosterone concentrations declined markedly with age in males, which suggested that low testosterone levels might have protected the aging heart against I/R injury

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Summary

Introduction

Treatment can require cardiac surgery, where the hearts are pre-treated with protective cardioplegic solution before ischemia and reperfusion (I/R). We investigated sex- and age-specific differences in I/R injury in the hearts pre-treated with clinically relevant cardioplegic solution. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a leading cause of death globally, and its prevalence increases with age in both sexes [1]. Preclinical studies have shown better recovery of contractile function in the young adult female hearts exposed to global ischemia when compared to agematched males [7,8,9]. This has been largely explained by protective effects of estrogen. There is growing evidence that low testosterone levels predispose toward CVDs [11], but the role of testosterone in the recovery of the heart after ischemic insult is not well understood

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