Abstract

Alcohol-related Cardiomyopathy (ACM) manifests in humans with a significant history of alcohol use and is characterized by ventricular dilation and cardiac function impairment. Although the most common age group for ACM is males between the ages of 30-55, women require a lesser lifetime alcohol exposure to develop ACM than men. The objective of this study is to assess sexual differences in a mouse model of chronic plus binge alcohol consumption. We hypothesize that female mice exposed to chronic plus binge alcohol will not develop as severe cardiac dysfunction as their male counterparts. In this study, male (n=19) and female (n=14) C57BL/6J mice were provided chronic plus binge alcohol feeding. After 5 days of acclimation to the liquid diet, mice are fed ad libitum 5% ethanol (EtOH) liquid or isocaloric control liquid diet for 30 days. At 10 and 30 days, mice received an oral binge dose of EtOH (5 g/kg body weight), or isocaloric maltose dextrin solution (9 g/kg body weight). Noninvasive cardiac structural and functional data were obtained via echocardiography at baseline and following binges. After 30 days, cardiac hemodynamics was measured by open chest left ventricle catheterization. Two-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post hoc analysis was performed for each cardiac parameter, and significance was defined as p<0.05. Male EtOH mice exhibited a significant decrease in stroke work (1119 ± 297 mmHg/mL when compared to male controls, 1622 ± 365 mmHg/mL; p= 0.03). Female EtOH mice had a nonsignificant decrease in stroke work (1242 ± 374 mmHg/mL when compared to female controls, 1423 ± 469 mmHg/mL; p= 0.80). Maximum left ventricular pressure was decreased 20% in male EtOH mice (p=0.003) but increased 10% in female EtOH mice (p=0.46). The maximum rate of pressure change within the ventricle was 24% lower in the male EtOH mice (p=0.02) and 9% higher in female EtOH mice (p=0.87). The minimum rate of pressure change within the ventricle was 24% higher in male EtOH mice (p=0.02) and 17% lower in female ETOH mice (p=0.44). After 30 days of EtOH exposure, male mice showed significant systolic and diastolic dysfunction. Female mice on the other hand, did not show substantial cardiac dysfunction after chronic plus binge ethanol exposure. Further experiments involving qPCR of proinflammatory and profibrotic markers will elucidate the molecular mechanism of sex differences in ACM development. R21AA029747 (JG & CB) & T32AA007577. This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.

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