1 research outputs found
Early structural alterations of intrinsic cardiac ganglionated plexus in spontaneously hypertensive rats
Persistent arterial hypertension leads to
structural and functional remodeling of the heart
resulting in myocardial ischemia, fibrosis, hypertrophy,
and eventually heart failure. Previous studies have
shown that individual neurons composing the
intracardiac ganglia are hypertrophied in the failing
human, dog, and rat hearts, indicating that this process
involves changes in cardiac innervation. However,
despite a wealth of data on changes in intrinsic cardiac
ganglionated plexus (GP) in late-stage disease models,
little is known about the effects of hypertension on
cardiac innervation during the early onset of heart failure
development. Thus, we examined the impact of early
hypertension on the structural organization of the
intrinsic cardiac ganglionated plexus in juvenile (8-9
weeks) and adult (12-18 weeks) spontaneously
hypertensive (SH) and age-matched Wistar-Kyoto
(WKY) rats. GP was studied using a combination of
immunofluorescence confocal microscopy and
transmission electron microscopy in whole-mount
preparations and tissue sections. Here, we report
intrinsic cardiac GP of SH rats to display multiple
structural alterations: (i) a decrease in the intracardiac
neuronal number, (ii) a marked reduction in axonal
diameters and their proportion within intracardiac
nerves, (iii) an increased density of myocardial nerve
fibers, and (iv) neuropathic abnormalities in cardiac glial
cells. These findings represent early neurological
changes of the intrinsic ganglionated plexus of the heart
introduced by early-onset arterial hypertension in young
adult SH rats