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1University of Melbourne Department of Medicine, 2Cardiac Investigation Unit, St. Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria; 3Cardiac Mechanics Research Laboratory, St. Vincent's Hospital and the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute, Sydney, New South Wales; and 4National Health and Medical Research Council Centres of Clinical Research Excellence in Therapeutics, Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine and Department of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Monash University, The Alfred, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Submitted 1 June 2005 ; accepted in final form 28 October 2005
Transgenic animal models have provided a vital insight into the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease, but functional cardiac assessment is often limited by high heart rates and small heart size. We hypothesized that in the presence of concentric left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (LVH), load-sensitive measures of contractility may be misinterpreted as overestimating global cardiac function, because the normal function of excess sarcomeres may displace a greater volume of blood during contraction. Conductance catheter technology was used to evaluate pressure-volume (P-V) relationships as a load-insensitive method of assessing cardiac function in vivo in 18-wk-old heterozygous (mRen-2)27 transgenic rats (a model of LVH), compared with age-matched Sprague-Dawley (SD) controls. Anesthetized animals underwent echocardiography followed by P-V loop analysis. Blood pressure, body weight, and heart rate were higher in the Ren-2 rats (P < 0.05). Load-sensitive measures of systolic function, including fractional area change, fractional shortening, ejection fraction, and positive peak rate of LV pressure development, were greater in the Ren-2 than control animals (P < 0.05). Load-insensitive measures of systolic function, including the preload recruitable stroke work relationship and the end-systolic P-V relationship, were not different between Ren-2 and SD rats. Regional wall motion assessed by circumferential shortening velocity suggested enhanced circumferential fiber contractility in the Ren-2 rats (P = 0.02), but tissue Doppler imaging, used to assess longitudinal function, was not different between groups. Although conventional measures suggested enhanced systolic function in the Ren-2 rat, load-insensitive measures of contractility were not different between Ren-2 and SD animals. These findings suggest that the normal range of values for load-sensitive indexes of contractility needs to be altered according to the degree of LVH. To accurately identify changes in systolic function, we suggest that a combination of echocardiography with assessment of load-insensitive measures be used routinely.
hypertension; conductance catheter; echocardiography; transgenic rat
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