Abstract

Heart failure has emerged as a disease with significant public health implications. Following progression of heart failure, heart and liver dysfunction are frequently combined in hospitalized patients leading to increased morbidity and mortality. Here, we investigated the underlying pathological alterations in liver injury following heart failure. Heart failure was induced using a modified infrarenal aortocaval fistula (ACF) in male Wistar rats. Sham operated and ACF rats were compared for their morphometric and hemodynamic data, for histopathological and ultrastructural changes in the liver as well as differences in the expression of apoptotic factors. ACF-induced heart failure is associated with light microscopic signs of apparent congestion of blood vessels, increased apoptosis and breakdown of hepatocytes and inflammatory cell inifltration were observed. The glycogen content depletion associated with the increased hepatic fibrosis, lipid globule formation was observed in ACF rats. Moreover, cytoplasmic organelles are no longer distinguishable in many ACF hepatocytes with degenerated fragmented rough endoplasmic reticulum, shrunken mitochondria and heavy cytoplasm vacuolization. ACF is associated with the upregulation of the hepatic TUNEL-positive cells and proapoptotic factor Bax protein concomitant with the mitochondrial leakage of cytochrome C into the cell cytoplasm and the transfer of activated caspase 3 from the cytoplasm into the nucleus indicating intrinsic apoptotic events. Taken together, the results demonstrate that ACF-induced congestive heart failure causes liver injury which results in hepatocellular apoptotic cell death mediated by the intrinsic pathway of mitochondrial cytochrome C leakage and subsequent transfer of activated caspase 3 into to the nucleus to initiate overt DNA fragmentation and cell death.

Highlights

  • IntroductionRight heart failure causes liver congestion which over time leads to liver stiffness and may result into liver fibrosis [3, 4]

  • In vivo hemodynamic measurements showed that central venous (CVP) (p

  • Liver sections of ACF rats revealed more extensive areas of large vacuoles, heterogeneous liver parenchyma consisting of dark and compact hepatocytes flanked by degenerated cells, as well as hepatocytes with large vacuoles (Fig 2F)

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Summary

Introduction

Right heart failure causes liver congestion which over time leads to liver stiffness and may result into liver fibrosis [3, 4]. This can induce a constellation of histopathological changes that can range from mild sinusoidal dilation to advanced fibrosis [3, 4]. In an animal model of caval vein clamping it was shown that liver congestion triggers liver stiffness with the end result of liver fibrosis without an overt inflammatory process [9]. There are only very few reports of histopathological alterations in liver sections obtained by aspiration biopsy or necropsy from patients with congestive heart failure [3]

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