Do early functional (stroke volume) and transcriptomic changes in the myocardium predict 3-day mortality in a rat model of sepsis?
Long-term fluid-resuscitated Wistar rat model of faecal peritonitis (sepsis)
Echocardiography and cardiac gene expression analysis at 6 hours post-insult
Sham-operated animals
3-day mortalitysurrogate
Early myocardial depression (stroke volume <0.17 ml) and specific transcriptomic changes in inflammatory and calcium cycling pathways strongly predict 3-day mortality in a rat model of sepsis.
Myocardial function is depressed in sepsis and is an important prognosticator in the human condition. Using echocardiography in a long-term fluid-resuscitated Wistar rat model of faecal peritonitis we investigated whether depressed myocardial function could be detected at an early stage of sepsis and, if so, whether the degree of depression could predict eventual outcome. At 6 h post-insult, a stroke volume <0.17 ml prognosticated 3-day mortality with positive and negative predictive values of 93 and 80%, respectively. Subsequent fluid loading studies demonstrated intrinsic myocardial depression with poor-prognosis animals tolerating less fluid than either good-prognosis or sham-operated animals. Cardiac gene expression analysis at 6 h detected 527 transcripts significantly up- or down-regulated by the septic process, including genes related to inflammatory and cell cycle pathways. Predicted mortality was associated with significant differences in transcripts of genes expressing proteins related to the TLR2/MyD88 (Toll-like receptor 2/myeloid differentiation factor 88) and JAK/STAT (Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription) inflammatory pathways, β-adrenergic signalling and intracellular calcium cycling. Our findings highlight the presence of myocardial depression in early sepsis and its prognostic significance. Transcriptomic analysis in heart tissue identified changes in signalling pathways that correlated with clinical dysfunction. These pathways merit further study to both better understand and potentially modify the disease process.
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Alain Rudiger
Heart Failure & Transplant
Alex Dyson
King's College London
Karen Felsmann
Schott (Germany)
Clinical Science
Jena University Hospital
Schott (Germany)
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Rudiger et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d572c5d9840517963cd5f9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1042/cs20120334