Malnutrition was common in patients with CHF. Evaluation of nutritional status may provide additional prognostic information in patients with CHF.
AimsHigh mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) is an abundant and ubiquitous nuclear DNA-binding protein that has multiple functions dependent on its cellular location. HMGB1 binds to DNA, facilitating numerous nuclear functions including maintenance of genome stability, transcription, and repair. However, little is known about the effects of nuclear HMGB1 on cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. The aim of this study was to examine whether nuclear HMGB1 plays a role in the development of cardiac hypertrophy induced by pressure overload.Methods and resultsAnalysis of human biopsy samples by immunohistochemistry showed decreased nuclear HMGB1 expression in failing hearts compared with normal hearts. Nuclear HMGB1 decreased in response to both endothelin-1 (ET-1) and angiotensin II (Ang II) stimulation in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes, where nuclear HMGB1 was acetylated and translocated to the cytoplasm. Overexpression of nuclear HMGB1 attenuated ET-1 induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. Thoracic transverse aortic constriction (TAC) was performed in transgenic mice with cardiac-specific overexpression of HMGB1 (HMGB1-Tg) and wild-type (WT) mice. Cardiac hypertrophy after TAC was attenuated in HMGB1-Tg mice and the survival rate after TAC was higher in HMGB1-Tg mice than in WT mice. Induction of foetal cardiac genes was decreased in HMGB1-Tg mice compared with WT mice. Nuclear HMGB1 expression was preserved in HMGB1-Tg mice compared with WT mice and significantly attenuated DNA damage after TAC was attenuated in HMGB1-TG mice.ConclusionThese results suggest that the maintenance of stable nuclear HMGB1 levels prevents hypertrophy and heart failure by inhibiting DNA damage.
The IBI, total duration of the procedure and pulse waveform strongly affected the magnitude or duration of the plasticity induced by QPS. In this cohort, 80% of subjects responded to excitatory QPS as expected.
Objective-The response-to-tissue-injury theory is currently the favorite paradigm to investigate valve pathology. To the best of our knowledge, there are currently no in vivo valve injury models. There are few calcific aortic valve stenosis (AVS) models that develop hemodynamically significant stenosis. Here, we investigated the effect of direct mechanical injury on aortic valves in vivo and developed a novel mouse model of calcific AVS. Approach and Results-Aortic valve injury was created by inserting and moving a spring guidewire under echocardiographic guidance into the left ventricle of male C57/BL6 mice via right common carotid artery. Serial echocardiographic measurements revealed that aortic velocity was increased 1 week after injury and persistently increased until 16 weeks after injury. AVS mice showed a higher heart weight/body weight ratio and decreased left ventricular fractioning shortening 4 weeks after injury, compared with sham mice. We found remarkable proliferation of valve leaflets 4 weeks after injury. Proliferative valves showed increased production of reactive oxygen species and expression of inflammatory cytokines and osteochondrogenic factors. Alizarin red staining showed valvular calcification 12 weeks after injury. Conclusions-We report a novel calcific AVS model to support the response-to-tissue-injury theory. This model may be a valuable tool for analyzing the mechanism of AVS and assessing therapeutic options. Materials and MethodsMaterials and Methods are available in the online-only Supplement. Results Aortic Valve InjuryThe surgical procedure time, including anesthesia, needed for aortic valve injury was 21.0±5.1 minutes. Seven of 132 mice died during the operation due to sudden cardiac arrest (5 mice) and bleeding (2 mice). In the sham group, 1 of 63 mice died as a result of bleeding. After aortic valve injury, 25 of 125 mice died during the next 16 weeks. Survival curves showed that 18.7% of mice with aortic valve injury died <4 weeks, whereas none in the sham-operated mice died ( Figure 2A). The causes of death after aortic valve injury were congestive heart failure with pleural effusion at autopsy (5) and unknown causes (20), most likely attributable to cardiac arrhythmia or heart failure without obvious effusion. Valve and Ventricular FunctionImmediately after injury, aortic regurgitation was not observed on 2-dimensional color Doppler and pulse-wave Doppler imaging, and aortic velocity did not increase. Mice with aortic valve injury had significantly higher aortic velocity and smaller aortic valve area compared with sham-operated mice 1 week after surgery. The elevated velocity persisted for 16 weeks without improvement. Left ventricular outflow tract velocity was not significantly increased at all time points. Left ventricular fractional shortening was significantly decreased 4 weeks after surgery, and left ventricular end-diastolic diameter was increased 8 weeks after injury (see Table). Heart weight/body weight ratio gradually increased ( Figure 2C). Additionally, real-t...
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