Chronic ventricular dilatation in dogs increased end-diastolic volume compared to acute dilatation (103 ml vs 72 ml, P<0.01), while sarcomere lengths remained resistant to chronic overstretch.
Chronic ventricular dilatation (n=10)
Chronic ventricular dilatation via arteriovenous shunt vs Acutely dilated ventricles
End-diastolic volume, p=<.01
Absolute Event Rate: 103% vs 72%
p-value: p=<.01
In 10 dogs left ventricular geometry and ultrastructure were examined 3 to 12 weeks after chronic ventricular dilatation was induced by means of a large arteriovenous shunt. Following cardiac catheterization, the hearts were arrested and fixed in diastole at the left ventricular end-diastolic pressures (LVEDP) which existed in the beating heart. Transmural LVEDP were increased in all animals (avg. 27 mm Hg). The diastolic pressure-volume relationship was shifted to the right, the average end-diastolic volume of the chronically dilated ventricles (avg. 103 ml) being larger than that of previously studied acutely dilated ventricles (avg. 72 ml, P <.01), but calculated diastolic wall stress values were not different. Sarcomere lengths in the chronically dilated hearts averaged 2.19±.02 µ ( SE ) (range 2.11 to 2.27), a value near the apex of the sarcomere length-tension curve, but not significantly different from sarcomere lengths in acutely dilated ventricles. Slippage between myofibrils, reflected by a loss of normal alignment of the Z lines, appeared to be one mechanism underlying this adaptation. The findings indicate that sarcomeres in the canine left ventricular wall are remarkably resistant to chronic as well as to acute overstretch. They further imply that little or no Frank-Starling reserve mechanism was available in these ventricles and raise the possibility that a descending limb of the heart's performance as a pump need not reflect a descending limb at the sarcomere level.
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John Ross
Université de Technologie de Compiègne
Edmund H. Sonnenblick
University of Parma
Roger R. Taylor
Boston University
Circulation Research
Harvard University
University of California, San Diego
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Ross et al. (Fri,) conducted a other in Chronic ventricular dilatation (n=10). Chronic ventricular dilatation via arteriovenous shunt vs. Acutely dilated ventricles was evaluated on End-diastolic volume (p=<.01). Chronic ventricular dilatation in dogs increased end-diastolic volume compared to acute dilatation (103 ml vs 72 ml, P<0.01), while sarcomere lengths remained resistant to chronic overstretch.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0908db5405cc787b9d1a07 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.28.1.49