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(Circulation. 2004;109:2263-2265.)
© 2004 American Heart Association, Inc.
Brief Rapid Communications |
From Imperial College London, National Heart and Lung Institute, Harefield Heart Science Centre, Harefield, UK.
Correspondence to Dr Cesare M.N. Terracciano, Cellular Electrophysiology, Imperial College London, NHLI, Harefield Heart Science Centre, Harefield Hospital, Harefield, Middlesex UB9 6JH, UK. E-mail c.terracciano{at}imperial.ac.uk
Received January 13, 2004; de novo received February 25, 2004; revision received March 30, 2004; accepted March 31, 2004.
| Abstract |
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Methods and Results We compared properties of cardiomyocytes obtained from tissue taken at explantation of the LVAD in patients with clinical recovery with those obtained from hearts of patients who did not show clinical recovery, thus requiring transplantation. Compared with myocytes taken at implantation, both the recovery and nonrecovery groups showed
50% reduction in cell capacitance, an index of cell size. However, action potential duration shortened, L-type Ca2+ current fast inactivation was more rapid, and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ content was increased in the recovery compared with the nonrecovery group.
Conclusions These results show that specific changes in excitation-contraction coupling, and not regression of cellular hypertrophy, are specifically associated with clinical recovery after LVAD and further identify sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ handling as a key functional determinant in patients with heart failure.
Key Words: mechanical devices electrophysiology heart failure myocytes sarcoplasmic reticulum
| Introduction |
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LVAD treatment results in numerous changes in cardiomyocyte phenotype, excitation-contraction coupling, gene expression, and function.2 Whether these changes are beneficial is not known. Regression of hypertrophy is thought to be an important factor in recovery.2 However, several studies have also shown that hypertrophy is not required as a compensatory response to pressure overload,4 and its regression is not necessarily associated with normalization of electrophysiological parameters.5
Cardiomyocytes isolated from biopsies taken at explantation of the LVAD in patients with clinical recovery showed reductions in cell volume and cell surface area. L-type Ca2+ current and sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ content were increased in myocytes during recovery, suggesting a critical role for intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis.6 Increased SR Ca2+ uptake in cardiac tissue after LVAD treatment has also been described previously.7 However, whether these specific cellular changes are related to clinical recovery remained unclear.
In this study, we compared findings in cardiomyocytes obtained from tissue taken from patients who recovered with those obtained from patients who, despite identical treatment, did not. This allowed correlation between cellular electrophysiological properties and clinical outcome.
| Methods |
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Before LVAD implantation, echocardiography showed left ventricular end-diastolic diameter of 78±12 mm, end-systolic diameter of 68±13 mm, and ejection fraction of 14±8% (n=6). In the patients showing recovery, end-diastolic diameter (15 minutes off-pump) decreased from 71±19 mm (before implantation) to 56±10 mm, end-systolic diameter decreased from 63±20 to 39±8 mm, and ejection fraction increased from 16±12% to 65±10% (n=6). In the patients who underwent transplantation, end-diastolic diameter was 74±8 and 59±10 mm, end-systolic diameter was 69±10 and 52±11 mm, and ejection fraction was 17±9% and 27±17% before implantation and before transplantation, respectively (n=4; recovery versus transplanted, P<0.001). The duration of LVAD treatment was 425±269 days (n=6) for the recovery and 468±116 days (n=4) for the transplanted group.
Ventricular myocytes were enzymatically isolated as described previously,6,8 placed on the stage of an inverted microscope, and superfused with a normal Tyrodes solution containing (in mmol/L) NaCl 140, KCl 6, MgCl2 1, CaCl2 1, glucose 10, and HEPES 10, with pH adjusted to 7.4 with 2 mol/L NaOH. Electrophysiological assessment was performed using switch-clamping and high (20 to 30 M
)-resistance microelectrodes containing KCl 2 mol/L, EGTA 0.1 mmol/L, HEPES 5 mmol/L, pH 7.2.6 Action potentials (APs) were triggered by 1 to 1.2 nA current pulses (frequency, 1 Hz; duration, 5 ms) and measured in current clamp. Cell capacitance (index of cell size) was measured as reported.6 The L-type Ca2+ current was the 200 µmol/L Cd-subtracted current recorded on voltage clamp steps from 40 to 0 mV for 500 ms (1 Hz). Decay of the current was fitted using 2-exponential decay. A fast time constant,
1, and slow time constant,
2, were measured. The SR Ca2+ content was measured by integrating a 20 mmol/L caffeine-induced transient inward current.9,10
Ethical approval was obtained by the Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Trust Ethics Committee. Informed consent was obtained from each patient. Data are expressed as mean±SD. Statistical differences between means were calculated with 1-way ANOVA comparisons and Bonferroni post hoc tests.
| Results |
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L-type Ca2+ current density measured in ventricular myocytes was not statistically different in the recovery versus the transplanted group (LVAD core: 1.32±0.49 pA/pF; N=6 patients, n=22; recovery: 2.62±0.79 pA/pF; N=5, n=16; transplanted: 2.13±1.85 pA/pF; N=4, n=12, P=NS). However, L-type Ca2+ current fast inactivation was significantly more rapid in recovery versus nonrecovery (
1 LVAD core: 16.4±3.3 ms; N=6, n=22; recovery: 9.5±1.7 ms; N=5, n=16; transplanted hearts: 19±5.5 ms; N=4, n=12; P<0.01, Figure 1), but the slow inactivation was unchanged (
2 LVAD core: 72±20 ms; N=6, n=22; recovery: 64±18 ms; N=5, n=16; transplanted hearts: 107±52 ms; N=4, n=12; P=NS). Finally, the SR Ca2+ content was increased in recovery compared with both the implantation and the nonrecovery groups (LVAD core: 30.3±16.9 µmol/L non-mitochondrial (non mito) volume; N=7, n=25; recovery: 83.9±37 µmol/L; N=6, n=18; transplanted: 35±15 µmol/L; N=4, n=13; P<0.01; Figure 2).
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| Discussion |
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We hypothesize that an increased SR Ca2+ content is linked to clinical recovery by improving cardiac function, as previously shown in animal models.11 This can be obtained by increasing the gain of excitation-contraction coupling (more Ca2+ release for unitary trigger), resulting in larger Ca2+ transients and stronger cell contractions.12
We also observed a faster inactivation of the Ca2+ current, and we suggest that this could be a consequence of a larger release of Ca2+ from the SR. This faster inactivation can possibly contribute to a shortening of the AP duration, which has also been demonstrated previously after LVAD treatment.2 We show here that this phenomenon is specifically associated with clinical recovery and that it is not observed in patients who required heart transplantation.
The mechanisms responsible for increased SR Ca2+ content are currently unknown. There are 3 major possibilities: increased SR Ca2+ uptake, reduced SR Ca2+ leak as a consequence of a more stable ryanodine receptor complex, and possibly altered function of Na+/Ca2+ exchanger. All these 3 factors are known to be affected in heart failure.13
Changes in AP duration are known to occur in heart failure.14 In explanted hearts after LVAD treatment, AP shortening has been described previously.15 In this study, we show that this phenomenon is associated with clinical recovery. These results support the importance of electrical reverse remodeling in the clinical improvement observed in our patients.
In this study, a reduction in cell capacitance and, by inference, cell size was not always associated with clinical recovery. A reduction in size could be produced by regression of hypertrophy with restoration of function or by atrophy caused by unloading, with impairment of function. The balance between these 2 effects could explain the different outcome in the patients with or without recovery, and more investigation in this direction is required.
In summary, we have shown that clinical recovery from end-stage heart failure after mechanical and pharmacological treatment is linked with modifications in excitation-contraction coupling, and SR Ca2+ homeostasis in particular, and not to a reduction in cell size. These findings support the importance of SR Ca2+ regulatory mechanisms in the pathophysiology and treatment of severe heart failure in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. Further research into the role of different forms of hypertrophy and/or atrophy in these patients is warranted.
| Acknowledgments |
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| References |
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