7 research outputs found

    Myocyte membrane and microdomain modifications in diabetes: determinants of ischemic tolerance and cardioprotection

    Full text link

    Arrhythmia susceptibility and myocardial composition in diabetes. Influence of physical conditioning.

    No full text
    Abnormal myocardial composition in diabetes mellitus has been described, but the effects on ventricular vulnerability have not been defined. We have assessed the susceptibility to arrhythmias in a canine model after 1 yr of mild diabetes induced by alloxan. Since physical conditioning can affect metabolic abnormalities in diabetes, this intervention has also been evaluated. Group 1 served as controls and groups 3 and 4 were diabetic. Animals in the latter group as well as nondiabetic controls of group 2 were exercised on a treadmill for the last 8 mo of the experiment. After 1 yr, anesthesia was induced with chloralose for vulnera-bility studies. The ventricular fibrillation threshold of 24.4±1.9 mA in group 3 was significantly less than in normals (45.1±2.2). Spontaneous arrhythmias were also more prevalent in diabetics during acute ischemia (group 3-A). Increased ventricular vul-nerability after epinephrine infusion was present in the sedentary diabetes despite normal ventricular function responsiveness. In a superfused preparation of myocardium, resting membrane po-tential and action potential amplitude were normal in diabetics, and beta-adrenergic stimulation shortened repolarization more than in controls. Myocardial collagen concentrations, which in-cluded an interfibrillar distribution on morphologic examination, were increased in group 3. In the trained diabetics of group 4 the basal vulnerability thresholds and responses to epinephrine were normal. While myocardial collagen levels were normal, cholesterol and triglyceride increments persisted. Thus, in mild experimental diabetes, enhanced susceptibility to arrhythmias exists; this susceptibility may be based on a combination of non-homogenous collagen accumulation affecting local conduction and increased electrophysiologic sensitivity to catecholamines

    COPULATORY COURTSHIP AND CRYPTIC FEMALE CHOICE IN INSECTS

    No full text
    corecore