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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 280: H11-H16, 2001;
0363-6135/01 $5.00
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Vol. 280, Issue 1, H11-H16, January 2001

Normal myocardial function in severe right ventricular volume overload hypertrophy

Yuji Ishibashi1, Judith C. Rembert2, Blase A. Carabello1, Shintaro Nemoto1, Masayoshi Hamawaki1, Michael R. Zile1, Joseph C. Greenfield Jr.2, and George Cooper IV1

1 Gazes Cardiac Research Institute, Medical University of South Carolina, and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Charleston, South Carolina 29403; and 2 Cardiology Division, Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27705

Severe left ventricular volume overloading causes myocardial and cellular contractile dysfunction. Whether this is also true for severe right ventricular volume overloading was unknown. We therefore created severe tricuspid regurgitation percutaneously in seven dogs and then observed them for 3.5-4.0 yr. All five surviving operated dogs had severe tricuspid regurgitation and right heart failure, including massive ascites, but they did not have left heart failure. Right ventricular cardiocytes were isolated from these and from normal dogs, and sarcomere mechanics were assessed via laser diffraction. Right ventricular cardiocytes from the tricuspid regurgitation dogs were 20% longer than control cells, but neither the extent (0.171 ± 0.005 µm) nor the velocity (2.92 ± 0.12 µm/s) of sarcomere shortening differed from controls (0.179 ± 0.005 µm and 3.09 ± 0.11 µm/s, respectively). Thus, despite massive tricuspid regurgitation causing overt right heart failure, intrinsic right ventricular contractile function was normal. This finding for the severely volume-overloaded right ventricle stands in distinct contrast to our finding for the left ventricle severely volume overloaded by mitral regurgitation, wherein intrinsic contractile function is depressed.

mitral regurgitation; cardiocyte contractile function


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G. Cooper IV
Cytoskeletal networks and the regulation of cardiac contractility: microtubules, hypertrophy, and cardiac dysfunction
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, September 1, 2006; 291(3): H1003 - H1014.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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