Abstract
Cardiac rupture can be fatal after myocardial infarction (MI). Experiments in animals revealed gender differences in rupture rate; however, patient data are controversial. We found a significantly higher rupture rate in testosterone-treated female mice within 1 wk after MI, whereas castration in males significantly reduced rupture. We hypothesized that testosterone may adversely affect remodeling after MI, exaggerating the inflammatory response and increasing cardiac rupture, whereas estrogen may be cardioprotective, attenuating early remodeling and reducing rupture rate. We studied the effect of gender and hormone manipulation on morphological and histological changes during early remodeling after MI in 4-wk-old male and female C57BL/6J mice and how these events could affect cardiac function. Females were randomly divided into 1) sham ovariectomy + placebo (s-ovx + P), 2) s-ovx + testosterone (T), 3) ovx + P, and 4) ovx + T; males were divided into 1) sham castration + P (s-cas + P), 2) s-cas + 17beta-estradiol (E), 3) cas + P, and 4) cas + E. At 6 wk after gonadectomy and hormone manipulation, MI was induced. Mice were randomly killed 1, 2, 4, 7, and 14 days after MI. The left ventricle was weighed and sectioned for evaluation of MI size, infarct expansion index (IEI), and neutrophil infiltration. Transthoracic echocardiography was performed in conscious mice in the 14-day group before organ harvest. Cardiac rupture rate and IEI were significantly higher in testosterone-treated females and noncastrated males than in controls; these effects were accompanied by enhanced neutrophil infiltration and pronounced deterioration of cardiac function and left ventricular dilatation. Ovariectomy in females and estrogen supplementation in males did not confer significant protection from cardiac rupture, IEI, or neutrophil infiltration. We concluded that, in mice, high testosterone levels enhance acute myocardial inflammation, adversely affecting myocardial healing and early remodeling, as indicated by increased cardiac rupture, and possibly causing deterioration of cardiac function after MI, and, conversely, estrogen seems to have no significant protective effect in the acute phase after MI.
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More From: American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology
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