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1 Divisione di Medicina, 2 Unita' di Malattie Metaboliche, Divisione di Medicina, 3 Cattedra di Clinica Medica Generale e Terapia Medica, Universita' Vita-Salute, 4 Dipartimento di Cardiologia, Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico, Hospital San Raffaele, 20132 Milan; and 5 Dipartimento di Medicina, Chirurgia ed Odontoiatria-DiMCO, Ospedale San Paolo, University of Milan, Milan I-20090, Italy
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ABSTRACT |
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There is growing evidence that hypertriglyceridemia exacerbates ischemic injury. We tested the hypothesis that triglycerides impair myocardial recovery from low-flow ischemia in an ex vivo model and that such an effect is related to endothelin-1. Hyperglycemic (glucose concentration = 12 mmol/l) and hyperinsulinemic (insulin concentration = 1.2 µmol/l) isolated rat hearts were perfused with Krebs-Henseleit buffer (PO2 = 670 mmHg, pH 7.4, 37°C) added with increasing triglycerides (0, 1,000, 2,000, and 4,000 mg/dl, n = 6-9 rats/group). Hearts were exposed to 60 min of low-flow ischemia (10% of basal coronary flow), followed by 30 min of reperfusion. We found that increasing triglycerides impaired both the diastolic (P < 0.005) and systolic (P < 0.02) recovery. The release of endothelin-1 during reperfusion increased linearly with triglyceride concentration (P = 0.0009). Elevated triglycerides also increased the release of nitrite and nitrate (NOx), the end products of nitric oxide, up to 6 µmol/min. Trimetazidine (1 µmol) further increased NOx release, blunted endothelin-1 release, and protected myocardial function during recovery. We conclude that high triglyceride levels impair myocardial recovery after low-flow ischemia in association with endothelin-1 release. The endothelium-mediated effect of triglycerides on both contractile recovery and endothelin-1 release is prevented by 1 µM trimetazidine.
nitric oxide
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INTRODUCTION |
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ACCUMULATING EPIDEMIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE suggests that the situation characterized by elevated plasma triglycerides (TG) is associated with increased cardiovascular risk independent of factors such as hyperglycemia and elevated plasma cholesterol (3). Hypertriglyceridemia is also a critical risk factor for coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality in subjects with impaired glucose tolerance or diabetes (18). Furthermore, hypertriglyceridemia is a common finding in survivors of acute myocardial infarction (27). This epidemiological evidence suggests that TG influence myocardial performance after ischemia-reperfusion independently of atherosclerosis progression.
Although its role in acute ischemia-reperfusion is controversial, endothelin-1 (ET-1) is known to exacerbate injury, likely via activation of ET type A receptors (9). Studies in isolated hearts showed that ET-1 release increases on early reperfusion after ischemia, thereby contributing to injury (7), and that ET-1 is a major factor that depresses cardiac function (6) and causes cell necrosis (8). These findings are consistent with other studies (21, 23, 30) demonstrating a relationship between ET-1 and the pathogenesis of myocardial ischemia. In humans, acute hypertriglyceridemia stimulates ET-1 release in normal subjects (36). In addition, hypertriglyceridemia is related with elevated plasma levels of ET-1 in glucose-intolerant and type II diabetic patients with insulin resistance syndrome (37). However, on an experimental ground, a link among hypertriglyceridemia, ET-1, and the outcome of the ischemia-reperfusion injury is still lacking. The purpose of this study is to provide experimental evidence of that link by testing the hypothesis that TG exacerbate the injury driven by ischemia-reperfusion and that this phenomenon is linked to ET-1.
The isolated crystalloid-perfused heart may be a suitable model to test
this issue in three steps: 1) evaluate the direct acute
effect of high TG on postischemic recovery, 2)
assess the link between the reperfusion injury and ET-1 release, and
3) evaluate the protection afforded by the piperazine drug
trimetazidine (TMZ). No attempt is made to investigate the mechanism
underlying ET-1 recognition by cardiac myocytes, because it is known to
involve ET type A receptors (9, 10, 19, 43). However, by
testing the effect of TMZ, a recognized anti-anginal and
anti-ischemic agent (13), one may understand the
site of action of TG. Indeed, TMZ inhibits the activity of 3-ketoacyl
coenzyme A (CoA) thiolase, the key enzyme of fatty acid
-oxidation,
thereby increasing myocardial oxidative glucose metabolism
(29), and the inability to utilize glucose for the
oxidative metabolism increases cardiovascular risk in the presence of
excess fatty acids (34). Citrate release is a useful index
of the flux through the
-oxidation path (50). In
addition, because inactivation of nitric oxide (NO) may play a
prominent role in cardiovascular disease (15), we measured the release of nitrite and nitrate (NOx), the end products
of NO metabolism, during the reperfusion as a probe to assess the viability of the endothelial cells.
To mimic the metabolic situation occurring in type II diabetic patients
during the postprandial period, we selected hyperglycemic and
hyperinsulinemic conditions. Indeed, hyperinsulinemia increases plasma
ET-1 in humans (36) because insulin stimulates ET-1
secretion from human endothelial (17) and vascular smooth
muscle cells (2). In this study, hearts perfused in the
presence of increasing TG concentration ([TG]), as well as
10
6 M TMZ, are exposed to low-flow ischemia and
reperfused. Data will show that the postischemic injury is
proportional to [TG] and ET-1 release and that the deleterious
effects of elevated TG are prevented by TMZ.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Heart perfusion. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-280 g body wt) fed ad libitum were anesthetized with heparinized thiopental sodium (10 mg/100 g body wt). Hearts were excised, immersed in isotonic saline solution (20°C) and mounted on the perfusion system as described previously (44). The time required for these operations never exceeded 45 s and was typically in the 15- to 30-s range. Langendorff perfusion started immediately with the media described below. A peristaltic pump (Gilson; Viliers Le Bel, France) delivered the medium at desired flows to the 8-µm-pore-size filter (47-mm diameter, Nucleopore; Pleasanton, CA), the preheater, and the aortic cannula. All the components of the apparatus, including the heart chamber, the oxygenator, and the preheater, were connected to a 1,760-W external water bath (Endocal, Neslab Instruments; Newington, NH) kept at 37.5 ± 0.5°C. A latex balloon in the left ventricle was connected to a pressure transducer (model 52-9966, Harvard Apparatus; Natick, MA) to monitor myocardial performance (see Experimental protocol). An additional transducer connected to the aortic cannula provided the coronary perfusion pressure (CPP). A cannula was inserted into the pulmonary artery to collect the venous return and to monitor venous PO2 by an O2-sensing electrode (model 5300 Oxygen Monitor, Yellow Springs Instruments; Yellow Springs, OH). The investigation conforms to the guidelines in the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (National Institutes of Health, Publication No. 85-23, Revised 1985).
The perfusion media consisted of a Krebs-Henseleit buffer with 2.0 mmol/l free Ca2+, 12 mmol/l glucose, and 20 mU/l human recombinant insulin (Actrapid HM, Novo Nordisk; Rome, Italy) added with variable amounts (22.5-90 ml/l perfusion medium) of Intralipid 20% (Fresenius Kabi; Verona, Italy). The medium composition was not changed during the protocol. Before dilution, Intralipid 20% contained 200 g/l TG, 12 g/l phospholipids, 25 g/l glycerol, and 257-280 mg/l cholesterol. Linoleic acid is the main fatty acid in TG (18 carbons, 2 cis double bonds), with linolenic, oleic, palmitic, and stearic acids accounting for <50% of the total. Vitamin E present in the mixture partly inhibits oxidation of unsaturated double bonds (G. Arcuri and F. Kabi, unpublished communication). In control hearts (TG0 group, n = 9), no Intralipid was added to the Krebs-Henseleit buffer. In the TG1,000 (n = 9), TG2,000 (n = 7), and TG4,000 (n = 6) groups, Intralipid was added to the medium to yield [TG] ~1,000, 2,000, and 4,000 mg/dl. The TG4,000 + TMZ (n = 5) group was similar to TG4,000 group, but with 10
6 M freshly prepared TMZ (Servier
Laboratories; Courbevoie, France). The medium was equilibrated at
PO2 = 670 ± 6 mmHg (means ± SE) and PCO2 = 36 ± 1 mmHg in
membrane oxygenators (45). The resulting pH was 7.38 ± 0.01 at 37°C.
Myocardial performance was monitored by a LabView system (National
Instruments, Austin, TX) running on Macintosh Quadra 700 (Apple;
Cupertino, CA). Measurements included the heart rate (HR), the
end-diastolic pressure (EDP), the peak systolic pressure (PSP), the
maximal rates of pressure development
(+dP/dtmax) and relaxation (
dP/dtmax), and the coronary perfusion
pressure (CPP). From these parameters, we derived the left ventricular
developed pressure (LVDP = PSP
EDP) and LVDP · HR,
which represents the myocardial contractile work. The resistance was
calculated as (CPP
EDP)/(flow rate)/(ventricle weight)
(11). The O2 uptake was calculated from the
arteriovenous PO2 difference and flow rate.
Experimental protocol.
All hearts were stabilized for 20 min at a flow rate of 15 ml/min for
baseline measurements. During this period, the volume of the
intraventricular balloon was adjusted to yield an EDP of 10 ± 1 mmHg and was kept constant afterward. Hearts were then subjected to
low-flow ischemia for 60 min by reducing the flow to 1.5 ml/min. After ischemia, hearts were reperfused for 30 min with
the same flow rate used during baseline. The recovery of postischemic myocardial performance was evaluated at the end of the reperfusion either as an increase of EDP and CPP above baseline values (
EDP and
CPP, respectively) or as a percentage of HR, LVDP, +dP/dtmax,
dP/dtmax, and LVDP · HR.
Measurements in the coronary effluent. Glucose was measured by a glucose-oxidase analyzer (Yellow Springs Instruments). Insulin was measured in a single assay [within-assay coefficient of variance (CV)-3.0%, between-assay CV-5.0%] with a microparticle enzyme immunoassay (sensitivity = 6 pmol/l, cross-reactivity with proinsulin <2%; IMX, Abbott Laboratories; Abbott Park, IL). Free fatty acid, TG, citrate, and lactate were measured by automated enzymatic spectrofluorimetric methods adapted to COBAS FARA II (within-assay CV-3.0%, between-assay CV-3.0%; Hoffman-La Roche; Basel, Switzerland).
To measure ET-1, the coronary effluent was collected every 10 min for 30 min during the reperfusion, and the samples were extracted on SepPack C18 minicolumn (Amprep, Amersham International; Buckinghamshire, UK). The eluate was evaporated in a Speed Vac (model SC110, Savant Instruments; Farmingdale, NY). Samples were then reconstituted with 250 µl radioimmunoassay buffer and assayed by a radioimmunoassay kit (Endothelin-1,2 High-sensitivity Assay System; Amersham International). The antiserum was a rabbit anti-ET-1 antibody, and the tracer was 125I-labeled ET-1. The assay sensitivity was 1.25 pg/ml, with a typical within- and between-assay CV = 3.0% and 11.9%, respectively. The total release of ET-1 during the reperfusion was calculated by taking the area under the curves representing ET-1 versus time by the trapezoidal rule and by considering, as a basal value, the ET-1 level measured at the end of ischemia. NOx was measured by enzymatic catalysis coupled with the Griess reaction (49). As for ET-1, total NOx release during reperfusion was calculated by measuring the area under the curves representing NOx versus time by the trapezoidal rule, after taking the NOx level measured at the end of ischemia as the basal value.Statistics. Data are expressed as means ± SE. To assess the effect of increasing [TG], we performed a two-way factorial analysis of variance test (StatView, Abacus Concepts; Berkeley, CA). To assess the effects of TMZ at constant [TG], we used Student's t-test. Simple regression analysis was performed using the indices of myocardial performance at recovery as the dependent variables and TG or ET-1 levels as the independent variables.
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RESULTS |
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The concentration of glucose and insulin in the media were
12.5 ± 0.5 mmol/l and 1.22 ± 0.03 µmol/l, respectively.
The level of free fatty acids was <0.2 mmol/l in both the arterial
inflow and venous effluent. Because all hearts kept contracting through the ischemia-reperfusion protocol, all data were available for analysis. Table 1 shows myocardial
performance during baseline. All parameters (except for CPP)
were not altered by the increase of TG. Although increased in the
TG1,000 group, resistance was not further altered for
fourfold Intralipid increases. There was no effect of TMZ during
baseline except for the higher O2 uptake in the
TG4,000 + TMZ group, which reflects the slightly improved, albeit nonsignificant, performance in TMZ hearts. Despite some intergroup differences in the O2
uptake-to-LVDP · HR ratio, which helps to address the relative
contribution of carbohydrates and lipids to energy production, there is
no [TG]-associated trend or significant effects of TMZ.
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The exposure of hearts to 60-min low-flow ischemia, followed by
30-min reperfusion, impaired myocardial performance. Increasing [TG]
further impaired recovery.
EDP increased with increasing [TG]
(P = 0.005) up to 38.5 ± 10.7 mmHg (Fig.
1A).
CPP tended to
increase, although nonsignificantly (P = 0.08). The
presence of 10
6 M TMZ in the medium blunted
(P = 0.05) the increase in EDP;
CPP tended to
decrease, although nonsignificantly (P = 0.07) (Fig. 1B). Figure 2 shows other
parameters of the ventricular function. HR was not affected by TG, but
TMZ increased HR at the end of the postischemic recovery
(P = 0.03). The recovery of LVDP was progressively
impaired by the increase of [TG] to 55 ± 5% of baseline (P = 0.0008). However, 10
6 M TMZ
significantly (P = 0.02) protected hearts and increased the recovery of developed pressure to 81 ± 7% baseline. The same trend as that described for LVDP was also observed for
+dP/dtmax,
dP/dtmax,
and LVDP · HR.
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Figure 3, A and
B, shows that increasing [TG] augments ET-1 release during
reperfusion from 0.9 ± 0.2 ng/min in the absence of TG to
6.3 ± 1.6 ng/min in the presence of 4,000 mg/dl TG
(P = 0.001). The presence of 10
6 M TMZ
completely blunted the release of ET-1 (P = 0.008).
Figure 3, C and D, shows that increasing [TG]
slightly increased the release of NOx. The release of
NOx appeared to be blunted when [TG] = 2,000 mg/dl
because a further [TG] increase did not augment NOx
release. However, in the presence of 10
6 M TMZ, the
release of NOx was augmented threefold with respect to the
same [TG] in the absence of TMZ. Figure 3E shows that the release of citrate increases linearly with [TG] and is blunted in the
presence of 10
6 M TMZ.
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Figure 4, A and B,
shows the correlation existing between ET-1 release and EDP or the
recovery of LVDP · HR measured at the end of the reperfusion.
The correlation is statistically significant (P = 0.0002 and P = 0.01, respectively). Similarly,
a significant correlation is found when substituting EDP or
LVDP · HR with either LVDP (P = 0.002),
+dP/dtmax (P = 0.005), or
dP/dtmax (P = 0.004) but not
CPP (P = not significant).
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Figure 5 shows the changes in the
O2 uptake-to-LVDP · HR ratio in the various groups.
Low-flow ischemia significantly decreased that ratio in all
groups with respect to baseline (P < 0.007). On
reperfusion, the O2 uptake-to-LVDP · HR ratio
recovered to near-normal values, with the exception of the
TG4,000 group, for which that ratio increased from
0.27 ± 0.02 to 0.55 ± 0.05 µmol · mmHg
1 · 1,000 (P = 0.003). Venous lactate concentration ([lactate]) at the end of
ischemia ranged from 1.6 to 2.3 mmol/l in all groups without
differences among the groups.
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DISCUSSION |
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In this hyperglycemic, hyperinsulinemic model, elevated [TG] in
the medium progressively impairs the postischemic recovery of
both systolic and diastolic functions. The impairment is associated with increased ET-1 release. The addition of 10
6 M TMZ
protects hearts from the deleterious effect of high TG. The protection
is associated with blunted ET-1 release and increased NOx release.
Critique of the model.
By reducing to a reasonable minimum the number of the involved
variables, the isolated crystalloid-perfused heart model appears suitable for studying the effects of TG in the
ischemic-reperfused cardiac muscle. The animals were not
pretreated; thus the observations relate to acute metabolic effects.
Any interference by neurohormonal factors is excluded because isolated
hearts are denervated. Perfusion with blood cell-free media excludes
the disturbing effect of neutrophil accumulation and thrombin-induced
platelet aggregation. Temperature is strictly controlled (±0.5°C). A
constant balloon volume rules out differences in loading conditions.
The duration and severity of ischemia are the same in all
groups. The changes in vascular resistance are monitored as
CPP
because the flows were the same in all the groups. Although the
selected experimental conditions with relatively short
ischemia-reperfusion times do not allow for appreciable no
reflow, the slight, nonsignificant increase of vascular resistance
shown in Fig. 1 indicate that this phenomenon might have occurred on a
longer time basis. The changes in diastolic contracture are reflected
by
EDP because the balloon volume is fixed at the start of the
experiment and kept constant afterward.
TG-associated injury.
The deleterious effect of plasma free fatty acids on myocardial
postischemic injury in vivo is well known (34).
However, the level of free fatty acids in the perfusion media employed in this study was always <0.2 mmol/l. Because of the relatively high
flow, free fatty acids were undetectable in the venous effluent. However, it is likely that TG were in part hydrolyzed in the vascular compartment, with release of fatty acids into the cytoplasm.
Measurement of the citrate release rate provided evidence of this
mechanism because this rate reflects the mitochondrial efflux of
citrate and is an index of the concentration of substrates feeding
acetyl-CoA and oxaloacetate for the citrate synthase reaction
(50). The essentially linear relationship between the
citrate release rate and [TG] supports the view that TG are partly
hydrolyzed into fatty acids, and fatty acids are uptaken into the
myocytes. Intracellular fatty acids are known to depress myocardial
recovery from ischemia (28), possibly through
increased
-oxidation and decreased glycolysis and/or glucose
oxidation. Measurement of citrate release during reperfusion rules out
the potentially masking effects of intracellular citrate concentration
peaks that might have occurred during ischemia (24). The blunted citrate release in TMZ-perfused hearts
reinforces the hypothesis that the protection afforded by TMZ is
exerted through inhibition of
-oxidation and stimulation of
glycolysis and/or glucose oxidation (29). Glycolysis is
important in restoring postischemic Ca2+
homeostasis and myocardial function (26), as well as in
maintaining membrane integrity (5). This study, however,
shows that high TG may impair the postischemic recovery also
through increased release of ET-1. Although this hypothesis requires
more mechanistic information on how high TG increases ET-1 formation or
expression, the present data demonstrates that in this model
progressively increased [TG] results in a dose-dependent increase in
ET-1 release and that increased ET-1 is highly related to the
ischemia-induced performance dysfunction (Fig. 4).
NO.
Decreased NO availability plays a significant role in the reperfusion
injury even in the absence of blood components, especially at the level
of the diastolic function (35). Indeed, supplementation with sodium nitroprusside during hypoxia improves left ventricle relaxation (14) and NO donors inhibit
reoxygenation-induced hypercontracture (46). The present
data shows that TG increases NOx release, probably by a
mechanism analogous to that described in small rabbit arteries, by
which NO-mediated, shear-induced dilatation opposes the
vasoconstriction elicited by increased pressure (38).
Indeed, ischemia and reperfusion cause injury to the vascular
endothelium, expressed as a reduction in NO release (47).
However, it appears from the data shown Fig. 3 that the increase in
NOx is blunted at [TG] = 2,000 mg/dl, thereby reducing the possible cardioprotective effect of NO, which is restored by
10
6 M TMZ. It was shown (31) that at low
doses NO may exert a positive inotropic effect on cardiac function,
whereas a relaxation-hastening effect of NO becomes apparent while the
dose of NO is increased. Therefore, it remains to be established
whether the NOx release found in the presence of TMZ falls
within the protective NO dose range. If we assume that the release of
NOx was constant over time during the 30 min of
reperfusion, then the value of 1,200 µmol/l divided by 30 min yields
40 µmol · l
1 · min
1
release, which is apparently beneficial to protect hearts after 60-min
low-flow ischemia.
TMZ.
We explored the effect of TMZ at concentrations (10
6 M)
that were previously found efficient with regard to ischemic
protection (4). This concentration is within the
therapeutic range because it compares with the blood levels obtained in
ischemic patients receiving oral treatment (40).
In this study, 10
6 M TMZ inhibits ET-1 secretion,
increases the release of NOx, and reduces the deleterious
effect of high TG.
-oxidation, TMZ
increases oxidative glucose metabolism (29) (see
TG-associated injury). Second, by sparing energy during
ischemia, TMZ preserves the ATP pool (1). Third,
TMZ reduces the intracellular acidosis caused by ischemia
(39). Fourth, TMZ enhances mitochondrial function
(12). Other studies aimed at assessing the effect of TMZ
on Na+-K+-ATPase (25) and on
mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake (22) showed that
this effect occurs only for TMZ levels much higher than those that
protect the myocardium. In the present study, it is difficult to assess
whether blunted ET-1 release is a consequence of the TMZ protective
effect on myocardium or if TMZ inhibits ET-1 release by protecting the
endothelium. However, the observation that TMZ greatly increases
NOx release strongly supports the hypothesis that in this
model part of the protection is exerted at the level of the endothelial
cells. Indeed, immunocytochemical studies aimed at localizing NO
synthase and ET-1 in the coronary vascular bed showed that both occur
in the endothelial cells (41). Furthermore,
pressure-induced tone is regulated by NO and ET-1 but no interaction
between the two factors was evident because they involve different
kinds of receptors, i.e.,
1- and
2-adrenoceptors (33).
Study limitation and clinical implications. Although we designed this study to mimic the reduction of coronary blood flow that might occur in atherosclerotic coronary vessels of hyperglycemic, hyperinsulinemic, and hyperlipidemic type II diabetic patients during the postprandial period, extrapolation of our data to the clinical situation is to be made with care. First, responses may be different in normal hearts and hearts from diabetic or hyperlipidemic rats. Second, although uncommon, the situation of [TG] = 4,000 mg/dl may be found in diabetic hyperlipidemic patients in the postprandial period. This situation is worth studying because the link between hypertriglyceridemia and CHD is best seen in the postprandial period, when patients experience exaggerated lipemia, probably related to the delayed clearance of dietary fats (51). The plasma TG level in the postprandial period is positively correlated (3-4 times) with the fasting TG level (20). Furthermore, normalization of plasma TG is markedly delayed in CHD patients because of the presence of gut-derived plasma lipids.
The use of media with increasing Intralipid contents might in principle alter the vascular tone. However, although resistance increased from TG0 to TG1,000, it remained constant up to TG4,000, suggesting that increased viscosity would not have significantly altered data. Although we cannot rule out the possibility that the presence of TG induces vasodilation, possibly via increased NO production, viscosity may not be a central problem. Indeed, the mean globule size for Intralipid is 340 nm (G. Arcuri and F. Kabi, unpublished communication), thus in the same order of magnitude of the size of chilomicrons (75-1,000 nm). However, the selected way to report data and evaluate statistics, i.e., by considering [TG] as a continuous variable, takes this issue into account. In this study, we did not investigate whether the presence of ET-1 receptor antagonists in the perfusion medium is able to reverse the deleterious effects of high TG on postischemic myocardial function. This important issue clearly deserves further work. In conclusion, high TG progressively impairs the myocardial recovery from low-flow ischemia. The impairment is significantly related to the release of ET-1, which appears to mediate the mechanism leading to injury. TG also increases the release of NO but not sufficiently to protect the heart from reperfusion injury. By further increasing NO release, 1 µmol/l TMZ prevents ET-1 release and reverses the harmful myocardial effect of TG. By providing experimental evidence of a link among elevated TG, ET-1, and myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury, this study supports the epidemiological evidence that suggests that the situation characterized by elevated plasma TG is associated with increased cardiovascular risk independent of factors such as hyperglycemia and elevated plasma cholesterol.| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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This study was supported in part by the Ministero dell' Università e della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica Grant "Molecular mechanisms of the protection of the ischemic heart," in part by Italian Ministry of Health Grant RF99.52 "Invalidant Complications of Diabetes," and in part by a grant from the Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico, Hospital San Raffaele.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: L. D. Monti, Divisione di Medicina, IRCCS, Hospital San Raffaele, Via Olgettina 60, 20132 Milano, Italy (E-mail: lucilla.monti{at}hsr.it).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 29 December 2000; accepted in final form 8 May 2001.
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