Abstract

The effect of the sulfur amino acid, taurine, was examined on histological and biochemical changes induced by a toxic dose of isoprenaline in chick hearts. Isoprenaline treatment (80 or 240 mg/kg id twice daily for 4 days) caused a dose-dependent increase in heart weight and decrease in myocardial ATP. Isoprenaline administration (240 mg/kg id twice daily) produced necrotic changes in hearts, such as eosinophilic degeneration, myolysis, interstitial oedema, fibrosis, and inflammatory cell infiltration. Substantial accumulation of calcium was also observed. Taurine content of the heart was not significantly decreased. Parenteral administration of taurine (200 mg/day for 7 days) partially protected against these necrotic changes induced by isoprenaline. It is suggested that the protective effect of taurine against isoprenaline-induced myocardial injury might be due in part to the prevention of the massive overloading with calcium which is thought to cause myocardial cell necrosis.

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