101 resultados para acute stress induced cardiomyopathy
Resumo:
Systemic hypertension increases cardiac workload and subsequently induces signaling networks in heart that underlie myocyte growth (hypertrophic response) through expansion of sarcomeres with the aim to increase contractility. However, conditions of increased workload can induce both adaptive and maladaptive growth of heart muscle. Previous studies implicate two members of the AP-1 transcription factor family, junD and fra-1, in regulation of heart growth during hypertrophic response. In this study, we investigate the function of the AP-1 transcription factors, c-jun and c-fos, in heart growth. Using pressure overload-induced cardiac hypertrophy in mice and targeted deletion of Jun or Fos in cardiomyocytes, we show that c-jun is required for adaptive cardiac hypertrophy, while c-fos is dispensable in this context. c-jun promotes expression of sarcomere proteins and suppresses expression of extracellular matrix proteins. Capacity of cardiac muscle to contract depends on organization of principal thick and thin filaments, myosin and actin, within the sarcomere. In line with decreased expression of sarcomere-associated proteins, Jun-deficient cardiomyocytes present disarrangement of filaments in sarcomeres and actin cytoskeleton disorganization. Moreover, Jun-deficient hearts subjected to pressure overload display pronounced fibrosis and increased myocyte apoptosis finally resulting in dilated cardiomyopathy. In conclusion, c-jun but not c-fos is required to induce a transcriptional program aimed at adapting heart growth upon increased workload.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Topiramate (Topamax(R)) is an anti-epileptic drug of the sulfamate group used secondarily for bipolar disease. HISTORY AND SIGNS: One week after initiation of topiramate treatment for a bipolar disorder, a 57-year-old man presented with blurred vision. Clinical examination revealed a bilateral conjunctivitis, areflexic mydriasis, severe anterior chamber shallowing, with a myopic shift and vitritis. THERAPY AND OUTCOME: A spinal tap revealed an increased protein content of 1581 mg/L on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis, being compatible with a rupture of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). UBM exposed bilateral ciliochoroidal effusions with secondary angle-closure. Topiramate was promptly discontinued, whereas visual acuity, intraocular pressure (IOP), and anterior and posterior segments anatomy normalized within 1 week. One month later, bilateral iris atrophy was present. CONCLUSION: The presence of BBB disruption with increased protein content in CSF with simultaneous blood ocular barrier breakdown may suggest a common inflammatory mechanism.
Resumo:
PURPOSE: To report the use of argon laser iridoplasty in the management of uveitic acute angle-closure glaucoma. METHODS: Interventional case report. RESULTS: A 46-year-old man developed uveitic acute angle-closure glaucoma with an intraocular pressure (IOP) of 65 mmHg. After unsuccessful attempts with medical treatment and two laser peripheral iridotomies, iridoplasty allowed to break posterior synechiae, open the angle, and reduce the IOP within a few hours. CONCLUSIONS: Argon laser iridoplasty allowed rapid reduction of IOP and prevented the need for emergency surgery. Therefore, the authors stipulate that it is a viable management option in active uveitic acute angle-closure glaucoma.
Resumo:
ABSTRACT: Ultramarathons comprise any sporting event involving running longer than the traditional marathon length of 42.195 km (26.2 miles). Studies on ultramarathon participants can investigate the acute consequences of ultra-endurance exercise on inflammation and cardiovascular or renal consequences, as well as endocrine/energetic aspects, and examine the tissue recovery process over several days of extreme physical load. In a study published in BMC Medicine, Schütz et al. followed 44 ultramarathon runners over 4,487 km from South Italy to North Cape, Norway (the Trans Europe Foot Race 2009) and recorded daily sets of data from magnetic resonance imaging, psychometric, body composition and biological measurements. The findings will allow us to better understand the timecourse of degeneration/regeneration of some lower leg tissues such as knee joint cartilage, to differentiate running-induced from age-induced pathologies (for example, retropatelar arthritis) and finally to assess the interindividual susceptibility to injuries. Moreover, it will also provide new information about the complex interplay between cerebral adaptations/alterations and hormonal influences resulting from endurance exercise and provide data on the dose-response relationship between exercise and brain structure/function. Overall, this study represents a unique attempt to investigate the limits of the adaptive response of human bodies.Please see related article: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7015/10/78.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to evaluate right ventricular (RV) and left ventricular function and pulmonary circulation in chronic mountain sickness (CMS) patients with rest and stress echocardiography compared with healthy high-altitude (HA) dwellers. BACKGROUND: CMS or Monge's disease is defined by excessive erythrocytosis (hemoglobin >21 g/dl in males, 19 g/dl in females) and severe hypoxemia. In some cases, a moderate or severe increase in pulmonary pressure is present, suggesting a similar pathogenesis of pulmonary hypertension. METHODS: In La Paz (Bolivia, 3,600 m sea level), 46 CMS patients and 40 HA dwellers of similar age were evaluated at rest and during semisupine bicycle exercise. Pulmonary artery pressure (PAP), pulmonary vascular resistance, and cardiac function were estimated by Doppler echocardiography. RESULTS: Compared with HA dwellers, CMS patients showed RV dilation at rest (RV mid diameter: 36 ± 5 mm vs. 32 ± 4 mm, CMS vs. HA, p = 0.001) and reduced RV fractional area change both at rest (35 ± 9% vs. 43 ± 9%, p = 0.002) and during exercise (36 ± 9% vs. 43 ± 8%, CMS vs. HA, p = 0.005). The RV systolic longitudinal function (RV-S') decreased in CMS patients, whereas it increased in the control patients (p < 0.0001) at peak stress. The RV end-systolic pressure-area relationship, a load independent surrogate of RV contractility, was similar in CMS patients and HA dwellers with a significant increase in systolic PAP and pulmonary vascular resistance in CMS patients (systolic PAP: 50 ± 12 mm Hg vs. 38 ± 8 mm Hg, CMS vs. HA, p < 0.0001; pulmonary vascular resistance: 2.9 ± 1 mm Hg/min/l vs. 2.2 ± 1 mm Hg/min/l, p = 0.03). Both groups showed comparable systolic and diastolic left ventricular function both at rest and during stress. CONCLUSIONS: Comparable RV contractile reserve in CMS and HA suggests that the lower resting values of RV function in CMS may represent a physiological adaptation to chronic hypoxic conditions rather than impaired RV function. (Chronic Mountain Sickness, Systemic Vascular Function [CMS]; NCT01182792).
Resumo:
We herein report the case of a 36-year-old man who died suddenly after a fight with another man. Forensic investigations included unenhanced computed tomography, postmortem angiography, autopsy, histology, neuropathology, toxicology, and biochemistry and allowed a traumatic cause of death to be excluded. An electrocardiogram recorded some years prior to death revealed the presence of an early repolarization pattern. Based on the results of all investigations, the cause of death was determined to be cardiac arrhythmia and cardiac arrest during an emotionally stressful event associated with physical assault. Direct third party involvement, however, was excluded, and the manner of death was listed as natural. The case was not pursued any further by the public prosecutor.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: Fibrotic changes are initiated early in acute respiratory distress syndrome. This may involve overproliferation of alveolar type II cells. In an animal model of acute respiratory distress syndrome, we have shown that the administration of an adenoviral vector overexpressing the 70-kd heat shock protein (AdHSP) limited pathophysiological changes. We hypothesized that this improvement may be modulated, in part, by an early AdHSP-induced attenuation of alveolar type II cell proliferation. DESIGN: Laboratory investigation. SETTING: Hadassah-Hebrew University and University of Pennsylvania animal laboratories. SUBJECTS: Sprague-Dawley Rats (250 g). INTERVENTIONS: Lung injury was induced in male Sprague-Dawley rats via cecal ligation and double puncture. At the time of cecal ligation and double puncture, we injected phosphate-buffered saline, AdHSP, or AdGFP (an adenoviral vector expressing the marker green fluorescent protein) into the trachea. Rats then received subcutaneous bromodeoxyuridine. In separate experiments, A549 cells were incubated with medium, AdHSP, or AdGFP. Some cells were also stimulated with tumor necrosis factor-alpha. After 48 hrs, cytosolic and nuclear proteins from rat lungs or cell cultures were isolated. These were subjected to immunoblotting, immunoprecipitation, electrophoretic mobility shift assay, fluorescent immunohistochemistry, and Northern blot analysis. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Alveolar type I cells were lost within 48 hrs of inducing acute respiratory distress syndrome. This was accompanied by alveolar type II cell proliferation. Treatment with AdHSP preserved alveolar type I cells and limited alveolar type II cell proliferation. Heat shock protein 70 prevented overexuberant cell division, in part, by inhibiting hyperphosphorylation of the regulatory retinoblastoma protein. This prevented retinoblastoma protein ubiquitination and degradation and, thus, stabilized the interaction of retinoblastoma protein with E2F1, a key cell division transcription factor. CONCLUSIONS: : Heat shock protein 70-induced attenuation of cell proliferation may be a useful strategy for limiting lung injury when treating acute respiratory distress syndrome if consistent in later time points.
Resumo:
Résumé Il est actuellement reconnu que l'endothélium vasculaire joue un rôle primordial dans la genèse des maladies cardiovasculaires, notamment l'artériosclérose. Dès lors, il est important de pouvoir investiguer la fonction endothéliale en clinique. Pour ce faire, il est particulièrement simple d'examiner la microcirculation cutanée, car celle-ci est très simplement accessible, de manière non-invasive, par fluxmétrie laser-Doppler. Pratiquement, on mesure l'augmentation du flux sanguin dermique en réponse à des stimuli connus pour agir via l'endothélium vasculaire. Les stimuli endothélium-dépendants les plus courants sont l'interruption temporaire du flux sanguin qui est suivie d'une hyperémie réactive, et l'administration transcutanée d'acétylcholine (Ach) par iontophorèse. La iontophorèse consiste à obtenir le transfert d' une substance ionisée, telle l'Ach, par l'application d'un courant électrique de polarité appropriée. L'objectif du présent travail était de déterminer le rôle des prostaglandines dans ces réponse vasodilatatrices dépendante de l'endothélium, rôle actuellement peu clair. 23 jeunes hommes volontaires non fumeurs et en bonne santé habituelle ont été examinés lors de deux visites séparées par 1 à 3 semaines. Lors de chaque visite, l'hyperémie réactive et la réponse vasodilatatrice à l'Ach ont été déterminées dans la peau de l'avant bras après administration soit d'un placebo, soit d'un inhibiteur de la cyclooxygénase (COX, enzyme qui contrôle la synthèse des prostaglandines). Chez certains sujets, l'inhibiteur était de l'acétylsalicylate de lysine (900 mg par voie intraveineuse). Chez d'autres sujets, il s'agissait d'indométhacine. (75 mg par voie orale). Comme la stimulation nociceptive liée au courant iontophorétique peut influencer la réponse à l'Ach, celle-ci a été déterminée en présence et en l'absence d'anesthésie de surface (crème de lidocaine). La réponse à l'Ach a été obtenue pour 4 doses différentes de cet agent (exprimées sous la forme de la densité de charge iontophorétique appliquée : 0.28, 1.4, 7, et 14 millicoulombs par cm2 de peau exposée). Le flux sanguin dermique était mesuré par imagerie laser-Doppler, une variante de la fluxmétrie laser-Doppler classique permettant l'exploration d'une surface de peau de taille arbitraire. Quelle que soit la condition testée, nous n'avons jamais observé la moindre influence de l'inhibition de la COX sur l'hyperémie réactive, ni sur la réponse à l'Ach. Cette dernière était augmentée significativement par l'anesthésie cutanée, que les sujets aient reçu ou non de l'acétylsalicylate de lysine ou de l'indométhacine . Par exemple, la réponses moyenne (±SD) à la plus haute dose d'Ach (testée sur 6 sujets, et exprimée en unités de perfusion, comme il est d'usage en fluxmétrie laser-Doppler ) était la suivante : en l'absence d'anesthésie : acétylsalicylate de lysine 339 ± 105, placebo 344 ± 68 ; avec l'anesthésie : acétylsalicylate de lysine 453 ± 76 , placebo 452 ± 65 (p * 0.001 pour les effets de l'anesthésie). En conclusion, nos résultats infirment une contribution des prostaglandines à l'hyperémie réactive ou à la vasodilatation induite par l'acétylcholine dans la microcirculation cutanée. Dans ce lit vasculaire, l'anesthésie locale accroît la vasodilatation induite par l'acétylcholine par un mécanisme indépendant des prostaglandines.
Resumo:
Cells respond to DNA damage in a complex way and the fate of damaged cells depends on the balance between pro- and antiapoptotic signals. This is of crucial importance in cancer as genotoxic stress is implied both in oncogenesis and in classical tumor therapies. p53-induced protein with a death domain (PIDD), initially described as a p53-inducible gene, is one of the molecular switches able to activate a survival or apoptotic program. Two isoforms of PIDD, PIDD (isoform 1) and LRDD (isoform 2), have already been reported and we describe here a third isoform. These three isoforms are differentially expressed in tissues and cell lines. Genotoxic stress only affects PIDD isoform 3 mRNA levels, whereas isoforms 1 and 2 mRNA levels remain unchanged. All isoforms are capable of activating nuclear factor-kappaB in response to genotoxic stress, but only isoform 1 interacts with RIP-associated ICH-1/CED-3 homologous protein with a death domain and activates caspase-2. Isoform 2 counteracts the pro-apoptotic function of isoform 1, whereas isoform 3 enhances it. Thus, the differential splicing of PIDD mRNA leads to the formation of at least three proteins with antagonizing/agonizing functions, thereby regulating cell fate in response to DNA damage
Resumo:
RATIONALE: The myeloid differentiation factor (MyD)88/interleukin (IL)-1 axis activates self-antigen-presenting cells and promotes autoreactive CD4(+) T-cell expansion in experimental autoimmune myocarditis, a mouse model of inflammatory heart disease. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine the role of MyD88 and IL-1 in the progression of acute myocarditis to an end-stage heart failure. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using alpha-myosin heavy chain peptide (MyHC-alpha)-loaded, activated dendritic cells, we induced myocarditis in wild-type and MyD88(-/-) mice with similar distributions of heart-infiltrating cell subsets and comparable CD4(+) T-cell responses. Injection of complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) or MyHC-alpha/CFA into diseased mice promoted cardiac fibrosis, induced ventricular dilation, and impaired heart function in wild-type but not in MyD88(-/-) mice. Experiments with chimeric mice confirmed the bone marrow origin of the fibroblasts replacing inflammatory infiltrates and showed that MyD88 and IL-1 receptor type I signaling on bone marrow-derived cells was critical for development of cardiac fibrosis during progression to heart failure. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate a critical role of MyD88/IL-1 signaling in the bone marrow compartment in postinflammatory cardiac fibrosis and heart failure and point to novel therapeutic strategies against inflammatory cardiomyopathy.
Resumo:
Chemical pollution is known to affect microbial community composition but it is poorly understood how toxic compounds influence physiology of single cells that may lay at the basis of loss of reproductive fitness. Here we analyze physiological disturbances of a variety of chemical pollutants at single cell level using the bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens in an oligotrophic growth assay. As a proxy for physiological disturbance we measured changes in geometric mean ethidium bromide (EB) fluorescence intensities in subpopulations of live and dividing cells exposed or not exposed to different dosages of tetradecane, 4-chlorophenol, 2-chlorobiphenyl, naphthalene, benzene, mercury chloride, or water-dissolved oil fractions. Because ethidium bromide efflux is an energy-dependent process any disturbance in cellular energy generation is visible as an increased cytoplasmic fluorescence. Interestingly, all pollutants even at the lowest dosage of 1 nmol/mL culture produced significantly increased ethidium bromide fluorescence compared to nonexposed controls. Ethidium bromide fluorescence intensities increased upon pollutant exposure dosage up to a saturation level, and were weakly (r(2) = 0.3905) inversely correlated to the proportion of live cells at that time point in culture. Temporal increase in EB fluorescence of growing cells is indicative for toxic but reversible effects. Cells displaying high continued EB fluorescence levels experience constant and permanent damage, and no longer contribute to population growth. The procedure developed here using bacterial ethidium bromide efflux pump activity may be a useful complement to screen sublethal toxicity effects of chemicals.
Resumo:
Unicellular organisms, such as the protozoan parasite Leishmania, can be stimulated to show some morphological and biochemical features characteristic of mammalian apoptosis. This study demonstrates that under a variety of stress conditions such as serum deprivation, heat shock and nitric oxide, cell death can be induced leading to genomic DNA fragmentation into oligonucleosomes. DNA fragmentation was observed, without induction, in the infectious stages of the parasite, and correlated with the presence of internucleosomal nuclease activity, visualisation of 45 to 59 kDa nucleases and detection of TUNEL-positive nuclei. DNA fragmentation was not dependent on active effector downstream caspases nor on the lysosomal cathepsin L-like enzymes CPA and CPB. These data are consistent with the presence of a caspase-independent cell death mechanism in Leishmania, induced by stress and differentiation that differs significantly from metazoa.
Resumo:
The purpose of this study was to assess whether the administration of a calcium entry blocker can prevent the acute blood pressure rise induced by cigarette smoking. Seven male habitual smokers were included. After 45 min of equilibration, they took in randomized single-blind fashion at a 1 week interval either a placebo or nifedipine, 10 mg p.o. Thirty minutes thereafter, the subjects smoked within 10 min two cigarettes containing 1.4 mg of nicotine each. In addition to heart rate and skin blood flow (laser Doppler method), blood pressure of the median left finger was monitored continuously for 100 min using a noninvasive device (Finapres). Nifedipine induced an increase in skin blood flow that was not influenced by smoking. This skin blood flow response was observed although nifedipine had by itself no effect on systemic blood pressure. The calcium antagonist markedly attenuated the blood pressure rise induced by cigarette smoking. However, it tended to accentuate the heart rate acceleration resulting from inhalation of nicotine-containing smoke.
Resumo:
The acute renal effects of hypoxemia and the ability of the co-administration of an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (perindoprilat) and an adenosine receptor antagonist (theophylline) to prevent these effects were assessed in anesthetized and mechanically-ventilated rabbits. Renal blood flow (RBF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were determined by the clearances of para-aminohippuric acid and inulin, respectively. Each animal acted as its own control. In 8 untreated rabbits, hypoxemia induced a significant drop in mean blood pressure (-12 +/- 2%), GFR (-16 +/- 3%) and RBF (-12 +/- 3%) with a concomitant increase in renal vascular resistance (RVR) (+ 18 +/- 5%), without changes in filtration fraction (FF) (-4 +/- 2%). These results suggest the occurrence of both pre- and postglomerular vasoconstriction during the hypoxemic stress. In 7 rabbits pretreated with intravenous perindoprilat (20 microg/kg), the hypoxemia-induced changes in RBF and RVR were prevented. FF decreased significantly (-18 +/- 2%), while the drop in GFR was partially blunted. These results could be explained by the inhibition of the angiotensin-mediated efferent vasoconstriction by perindoprilat. In 7 additional rabbits, co-administration of perindoprilat and theophylline (1 mg/kg) completely prevented the hypoxemia-induced changes in RBF (+ 11 +/- 3%) and GFR (+ 2 +/- 3%), while RVR decreased significantly (-14 +/- 3%). Since adenosine and angiotensin II were both shown to participate, at least in part, in the renal changes induced by hypoxemia, the beneficial effects of perindoprilat and theophylline in this model could be mediated by complementary actions of angiotensin II and adenosine on the renal vasculature.