23 research outputs found

    Non-invasive anatomic and functional imaging of vascular inflammation and unstable plaque

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    Over the last several decades, basic cardiovascular research has significantly enhanced our understanding of pathobiological processes leading to formation, progression, and complications of atherosclerotic plaques. By harnessing these advances in cardiovascular biology, imaging has advanced beyond its traditional anatomical domains to a tool that permits probing of particular molecular structures to image cellular behaviour and metabolic pathways involved in atherosclerosis. From the nascent atherosclerotic plaque to the death of inflammatory cells, several potential molecular and micro-anatomical targets for imaging with particular selective imaging probes and with a variety of imaging modalities have emerged from preclinical and animal investigations. Yet, substantive barriers stand between experimental use and wide clinical application of these novel imaging strategies. Each of the imaging modalities described herein faces hurdles—for example, sensitivity, resolution, radiation exposure, reproducibility, availability, standardization, or costs. This review summarizes the published literature reporting on functional imaging of vascular inflammation in atherosclerotic plaques emphasizing those techniques that have the greatest and/or most immediate potential for broad application in clinical practice. The prospective evaluation of these techniques and standardization of protocols by multinational networks could serve to determine their added value in clinical practice and guide their development and deploymen

    Stunning, Hibernation, and Assessment of Myocardial Viability

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    Noninvasive imaging of vascular inflammation

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    In large-vessel vasculitides, inflammatory infiltrates may cause thickening of the involved arterial vessel wall leading to progressive stenosis and occlusion. Dilatation, aneurysm formation, and thrombosis may also ensue. Activated macrophages and T lymphocytes are fundamental elements in vascular inflammation. The amount and density of the inflammatory infiltrate is directly linked to local disease activity. Additionally, patients with autoimmune disorders have an increased cardiovascular risk compared with age-matched healthy individuals as a consequence of accelerated atherosclerosis. Molecular imaging techniques targeting activated macrophages, neovascularization or increased cellular metabolic activity can represent effective means of noninvasive detection of vascular inflammation. In the present review novel noninvasive imaging tools, that have been successfully tested in humans, will be presented. These include contrast enhanced ultrasonography, which allows detection of neovessels within the wall of inflamed arteries; contrast enhanced cardiovascular magnetic resonance that can detect increased thickness of the arterial wall, usually associated with edema, or mural enhancement using T2 and post-contrast T1-weighted sequences respectively; and positron emission tomography associated with radio-tracers such as [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose and the new [11C]-PK11195 in combination with computed tomography angiography to detect activated macrophages within the vessel wall. Imaging techniques are useful in the diagnostic work-up of large- and medium-vessel vasculitides, to monitor disease activity and the response to treatments. Finally, molecular imaging targets can provide new clues about the pathogenesis and evolution of immune-mediated disorders involving arterial vessels

    Myocardial stunning is associated with impaired calcium uptake by sarcoplasmic reticulum

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    Myocardial stunning (temporary post-ischaemic contractile dysfunction) may be caused by oxidative stress and/or impaired myocyte calcium homeostasis. Regional myocardial stunning was induced in open-chest pigs (segment shortening reduced to 68.3+/-4.7% of baseline) by repetitive brief circumflex coronary occlusion (I/R). Reduced glutathione was depleted in stunned myocardium (1.34+/-0.06 vs. 1.77+/-0.11 nmol/mg, p=0.02 vs. remote myocardium) indicating regional oxidant stress, but no regional differences were observed in protein-bound 3-nitrotyrosine or S-nitrosothiol content. Repetitive I/R did not affect myocardial quantities of the sarcolemmal sodium-calcium exchanger, L-type channel, SR calcium ATPase and phospholamban, or the kinetics of ligand binding to L-type channels and SR calcium release channels. However, initial rates of oxalate-supported (45)Ca uptake by SR were impaired in stunned myocardium (41.3+/-13.5 vs. 73.0+/-15.6 nmol/min/mg protein, p=0.03). The ability of SR calcium ATPase to sequester cytosolic calcium is impaired in stunned myocardium. This is a potential mechanism underlying contractile dysfunction

    Mitochondrial Energetics and Ca2+-Activated ATPase in Obstructive Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

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    Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common genetic disease of the myocardium associated to mutations in sarcomeric genes, but the link between genotype and phenotype remains poorly understood. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy studies have demonstrated impaired cardiac energetics in patients with HCM, and altered mitochondria were described in biopsies, but little is known about possible perturbations of mitochondrial function and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production/consumption. The aim of this study was to investigate possible abnormalities in mitochondrial enzymes generating/scavenging reactive oxygen species, and changes in the Ca2+-activated ATPases in myocardial tissue from patients with obstructive HCM undergoing surgical myectomy compared to unused donor hearts (CTRL). Methods and Results: Both the amount and activity of mitochondrial Complex I (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide -reduced form, NADH, dehydrogenase) were upregulated in HCM vs. CTRL, whilst the activity of Complex V (ATP synthase) was not reduced and ATP levels were significantly higher in HCM vs. CTRL. Antioxidant Mn-activated superoxide dismutase (SOD2) and (m)-aconitase activities were increased in HCM vs. CTRL. The Cu/Zn-activated superoxide dismutase (SOD1) amount and mtDNA copy number were unaltered in HCM. Total Ca2+- activated ATPase activity and absolute amount were not different HCM vs. CTRL, but the ratio between ATPase sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ transporting type 2 (ATP2A2) and type 1 (ATP2A1), ATP2A2/ATP2A1, was increased in HCM in favor of the slow isoform (ATP2A2). Conclusion: HCM is characterized by mitochondrial Complex I hyperactivity and preserved Ca2+-activated ATPase activity with a partial switch towards slow ATP2A2. This data may give insight into the abnormal cellular energetics observed in HCM cardiomyopathy but other studies would need to be performed to confirm the observations described here
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