Abstract

Myocardial infarction (MI) may produce significant inflammatory changes and adverse ventricular remodeling leading to heart failure and premature death. Pharmacologic, stem cell transplantation, and exercise have not halted the inexorable rise in the prevalence and great economic costs of heart failure despite extensive investigations of such treatments. New therapeutic modalities are needed. Whole Body Periodic Acceleration (pGz) is a non-invasive technology that increases pulsatile shear stress to the endothelium thereby producing several beneficial cardiovascular effects as demonstrated in animal models, normal humans and patients with heart disease. pGz upregulates endothelial derived nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) and its phosphorylation (p-eNOS) to improve myocardial function in models of myocardial stunning and preconditioning. Here we test whether pGz applied chronically after focal myocardial infarction in rats improves functional outcomes from MI. Focal MI was produced by left coronary artery ligation. One day after ligation animals were randomized to receive daily treatments of pGz for four weeks (MI-pGz) or serve as controls (MI-CONT), with an additional group as non-infarction controls (Sham). Echocardiograms and invasive pressure volume loop analysis were carried out. Infarct transmurality, myocardial fibrosis, and markers of inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines were determined along with protein analysis of eNOS, p-eNOS and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS).At four weeks, survival was 80% in MI-pGz vs 50% in MI-CONT (p< 0.01). Ejection fraction and fractional shortening and invasive pressure volume relation indices of afterload and contractility were significantly better in MI-pGz. The latter where associated with decreased infarct transmurality and decreased fibrosis along with increased eNOS, p-eNOS. Additionally, MI-pGz had significantly lower levels of iNOS, inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, TNF-α), and higher level of anti-inflammatory cytokine (IL-10). pGz improved survival and contractile performance, associated with improved myocardial remodeling. pGz may serve as a simple, safe, non-invasive therapeutic modality to improve myocardial function after MI.

Highlights

  • Myocardial Infarction (MI) and its associated functional derangements may lead to heart failure that affects 2–3% of the population in industrialized countries with a marked rise in those aged >65yr

  • As the body accelerates and decelerates, low amplitude pulses are added to the circulation as a function of platform frequency thereby increasing pulsatile shear stress to the endothelium [5,6,7,8, 9]. pGz through its increase of pulsatile shear stress upregulates endothelial derived nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) and increases its phosphorylation p-eNOS (Ser 1177) [10] eNOS phosphorylation after pGz is responsible for shear stress dependent vasodilatation and subsequent increase nitric oxide release into the circulation [9, 11,12,13]. pGz applied in a swine model of myocardial stunning induced by whole body ischemia reperfusion injury, acutely improves myocardial function due to increase eNO as well as other cardioprotective mediators [6, 8, 10, 14]

  • Treatment with pGz for four weeks decreased transmurality of the infarct from 60± 5% for MI-CONT to 48±4% for MI-pGz (p< 0.01)

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Summary

Introduction

Myocardial Infarction (MI) and its associated functional derangements may lead to heart failure that affects 2–3% of the population in industrialized countries with a marked rise in those aged >65yr. PGz applied in a swine model of myocardial stunning induced by whole body ischemia reperfusion injury, acutely improves myocardial function due to increase eNO as well as other cardioprotective mediators [6, 8, 10, 14].

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