Obesity adversely affects myocardial metabolism, efficiency, and diastolic function. Our objective was to determine if weight loss can ameliorate obesity-related myocardial metabolism and efficiency derangements and that these improvements directly relate to improved diastolic function in humans. We studied 30 obese (body mass index [BMI]>30kg/m2) subjects with positron emission tomography (myocardial metabolism, blood flow) and echocardiography (structure, function) before and after marked weight loss from gastric bypass surgery (N=10) or moderate weight loss from diet (N=20). Baseline BMI, insulin resistance, hemodynamics, left ventricular (LV) mass, systolic function, myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2), and fatty acid (FA) metabolism were similar between the groups. MVO2/gram decreased after diet-induced weight loss (P=0.009). Total MVO2 decreased after dietary (P=0.02) and surgical weight loss (P=0.0006) and was related to decreased BMI (P=0.006). Total myocardial FA utilization decreased (P=0.03), and FA oxidation trended lower (P=0.06) only after surgery. FA esterification and LV efficiency were unchanged. After surgical weight loss, LV mass decreased by 23%, (Doppler-derived) E/E’ by 33%, and relaxation increased (improved) by 28%, and. Improved LV relaxation related significantly to decreased BMI, insulin resistance, total MVO2, and LV mass but not FA utilization. Decreased total MVO2 predicted LV relaxation improvement independent of BMI change (P=0.02). Weight loss can ameliorate the obesity-related derangements in myocardial metabolism and LV structure and diastolic function. Decreased total MVO2 independently predicted improved LV relaxation, suggesting that myocardial oxygen metabolism may be mechanistically important in determining cardiac relaxation.
Objective: Using a mouse model of Eln (elastin) insufficiency that spontaneously develops neointima in the ascending aorta, we sought to understand the origin and phenotypic heterogeneity of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) contributing to intimal hyperplasia. We were also interested in exploring how vascular cells adapt to the absence of Eln. Approach and Results: We used single-cell sequencing together with lineage-specific cell labeling to identify neointimal cell populations in a noninjury, genetic model of neointimal formation. Inactivating Eln production in vascular SMCs results in rapid intimal hyperplasia around breaks in the ascending aorta’s internal elastic lamina. Using lineage-specific Cre drivers to both lineage mark and inactivate Eln expression in the secondary heart field and neural crest aortic SMCs, we found that cells with a secondary heart field lineage are significant contributors to neointima formation. We also identified a small population of secondary heart field-derived SMCs underneath and adjacent to the internal elastic lamina. Within the neointima of SMC-Eln knockout mice, 2 unique SMC populations were identified that are transcriptionally different from other SMCs. While these cells had a distinct gene signature, they expressed several genes identified in other studies of neointimal lesions, suggesting that some mechanisms underlying neointima formation in Eln insufficiency are shared with adult vessel injury models. Conclusions: These results highlight the unique developmental origin and transcriptional signature of cells contributing to neointima in the ascending aorta. Our findings also show that the absence of Eln, or changes in elastic fiber integrity, influences the SMC biological niche in ways that lead to altered cell phenotypes.
Although echocardiography is an important first line means to establish the diagnosis of aortic coarctations, CT and MRI-based techniques enable the provision of patient-specific management options, can guide transcatheter interventions and detect long-term post-intervention complications.
In animal models of heart failure (HF), myocardial metabolism shifts from the normal preference for high-energy fatty acid (FA) metabolism towards the more efficient fuel, glucose. However, FA (vs. glucose) metabolism generates more ATP/mole; thus FA metabolism may be especially advantageous in HF. Sex modulates myocardial blood flow (MBF) and substrate metabolism in normal humans. Whether sex affects MBF and metabolism in patients with HF is unknown. We studied 19 well-matched men and women with nonischemic HF with similar ejection fractions (all ≤ 35%). MBF and myocardial substrate metabolism were quantified using positron emission tomography. Women had higher MBF (mL/g/min), FA uptake (mL/g/min), utilization (nmol/g/min) (P<0.005, <0.005, <0.05, respectively) and trended towards higher FA oxidation than men (P=0.09). These findings were independent of age, obesity, and insulin resistance. There were no sex-related differences in fasting myocardial glucose uptake or metabolism. In an exploratory analysis of the longitudinal follow-up of these subjects (mean 7 y), we found that 4 men had a major cardiovascular event, while one woman died of non-cardiac causes. Higher MBF related to improved event-free survival (HR=0.31, P=0.02). In sum, in nonischemic HF, women have higher MBF and FA uptake and metabolism than men, and these changes are not due to differences in other variables that can affect myocardial metabolism (e.g., age, obesity, or insulin resistance). Moreover, higher MBF portends a better prognosis. These sex-related differences should be taken into account in the development and targeting of novel agents aimed at modulating in MBF and metabolism in HF.
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