Cardiac and respiratory muscle responses to dietary N-acetylcysteine in rats consuming a high-saturated fat, high-sucrose diet.
Rachel C KelleyStephanie S LapierreDerek R MuscatoDongwoo HahnDemetra D ChristouLeonardo F FerreiraPublished in: Experimental physiology (2022)
Individuals with overweight or obesity display respiratory and cardiovascular dysfunction, and oxidative stress is a causative factor in the general aetiology of obesity and of skeletal and cardiac muscle pathology. Thus, this preclinical study aimed to define diaphragmatic and cardiac morphological and functional alterations in response to an obesogenic diet in rats and the therapeutic potential of an antioxidant supplement, N-acetylcysteine (NAC). Young male Wistar rats consumed ad libitum a 'lean' or high-saturated fat, high-sucrose (HFHS) diet for ∼22 weeks and were randomized to control or NAC (2 mg/ml in the drinking water) for the last 8 weeks of the dietary intervention. We then evaluated diaphragmatic and cardiac morphology and function. Neither HFHS diet nor NAC supplementation affected diaphragm-specific force, peak power or morphology. Right ventricular weight normalized to estimated body surface area, left ventricular fractional shortening and posterior wall maximal shortening velocity were higher in HFHS compared with lean control animals and not restored by NAC. In HFHS rats, the elevated deceleration rate of early transmitral diastolic velocity was prevented by NAC. Our data showed that the HFHS diet did not compromise diaphragmatic muscle morphology or in vitro function, suggesting other possible contributors to breathing abnormalities in obesity (e.g., abnormalities of neuromuscular transmission). However, the HFHS diet resulted in cardiac functional and morphological changes suggestive of hypercontractility and diastolic dysfunction. Supplementation with NAC did not affect diaphragm morphology or function but attenuated some of the cardiac abnormalities in the rats receiving the HFHS diet.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- left ventricular
- physical activity
- transcription factor
- oxidative stress
- drinking water
- metabolic syndrome
- weight gain
- insulin resistance
- skeletal muscle
- heart failure
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- randomized controlled trial
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- left atrial
- body mass index
- clinical trial
- acute myocardial infarction
- open label
- bone marrow
- stem cells
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- high fat diet induced
- phase iii
- artificial intelligence
- blood flow
- aortic stenosis
- bone mineral density
- genome wide analysis
- anti inflammatory
- heart rate
- induced apoptosis
- postmenopausal women
- high intensity
- study protocol
- atrial fibrillation
- mechanical ventilation
- body composition
- heavy metals
- heat shock