Right ventricular diastolic adaptation to pressure overload in different rat strains.
Julie Sørensen AxelsenStine AndersenSteffen RinggaardRowan SmalAida Lluciá-ValldeperasJens Erik Nielsen-KudskFrances S de ManAsger AndersenPublished in: Physiological reports (2024)
Different rat strains are used in various animal models of pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular (RV) failure. No systematic assessment has been made to test differences in RV response to pressure overload between rat strains. We compared RV adaptation to pulmonary trunk banding (PTB) in Wistar (W), Sprague Dawley (SD), and Fischer344 (F) rats by hemodynamic profiling focusing on diastolic function. Age-matched male rat weanlings were randomized to sham surgery (W-sham, n = 5; SD-sham, n = 4; F-sham, n = 4) or PTB (W-PTB, n = 8; SD-PTB, n = 8; F-PTB, n = 8). RV function was evaluated after 5 weeks by echocardiography, cardiac MRI, and invasive pressure-volume measurements. PTB caused RV failure and increased RV systolic pressures four-fold in all three PTB groups compared with sham. W- and SD-PTB had a 2.4-fold increase in RV end-systolic volume index compared with sham, while F-PTB rats were less affected. Diastolic and right atrial impairment were evident by increased RV end-diastolic elastance, filling pressure, and E/e' in PTB rats compared with sham, again F-PTB the least affected. In conclusions, PTB caused RV failure with signs of diastolic dysfunction. Despite a similar increase in RV systolic pressure, F-PTB rats showed less RV dilatation and a more preserved diastolic function compared with W- and SD-PTB.
Keyphrases
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- left ventricular
- blood pressure
- double blind
- pulmonary hypertension
- heart failure
- oxidative stress
- escherichia coli
- ejection fraction
- magnetic resonance imaging
- minimally invasive
- computed tomography
- left atrial
- atrial fibrillation
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- single cell
- phase ii
- catheter ablation