Abstract
The well known cardiotoxic effect of isoproterenol (ISO) was investigated in normal and streptozotocin diabetic rats. Seven days after the subcutaneous injection of ISO (15 mg/kg) the hearts were perfusion fixed and 12 sections from each heart were stained (Masson's trichrome). ISO induced myocardial fibrosis was quantified at the light microscopic level according to established morphometric principles. Pulse rate and ST elevation were recorded by EEC (3 standard leads) before and after the ISO injection. Non-diabetic control animals showed marked fibrosis after ISO, but surprisingly the diabetic animals showed no fibrosis after ISO treatment. These findings were in accordance with an ISO induced ST elevation seen only among control animals although both groups showed the same degree of tachycardia. Insulin treatment prevented the protection against ISO and when streptozotocin was injected 24 h after the ISO a normal quantitative and qualitative appearance of the scar tissue was seen. It thus seems that streptozotocin diabetic rats are protected against the toxic effect of ISO, leaving the haemodynamic response unaffected. Which factor in the diabetic metabolism is responsible for the present phenomenon is not known, but a defect in the signal transmission from the beta-receptor to the adenylcyclase is suggested as a possible explanation.
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