Given the high mortality in patients
with cardiovascular diseases
and the life-threatening consequences of drugs with unforeseen adverse
effects on hearts, a critical evaluation of the pharmacological response
of cardiovascular function on model animals is important especially
in the early stages of drug development. We report a proof-of-principle
study to demonstrate the utility of zebrafish as an analytical platform
to predict the cardiac response of new drugs or chemicals on human
beings. With pseudodynamic 3D imaging, we derive individual parameters
that are central to the cardiac function of zebrafish, including the
ventricular stroke volume, ejection fraction, cardiac output, heart
rate, diastolic filling function, and ventricular mass. We evaluate
both inotropic and chronotropic responses of the heart of zebrafish
treated with drugs that are commonly prescribed and possess varied
known cardiac activities. We reveal deranged cardiac function of a
zebrafish model of cardiomyopathy induced with a cardiotoxic drug.
The cardiac function of zebrafish exhibits a pharmacological response
similar to that of human beings. We compare also cardiac parameters
obtained in this work with those derived with conventional 2D approximation
and show that the latter tends to overestimate the cardiac parameters
and produces results of greater variation. In view of the growing
interest of using zebrafish in both fundamental and translational
biomedical research, we envisage that our approach should benefit
not only contemporary pharmaceutical development but also exploratory
research such as gene, stem cell, or regenerative therapies targeting
congenital or acquired heart diseases