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Metabolism: flow and contractility of the Langendorff heart
- Publication date
- 18 October 1978
- Publisher
- This thesis reviews current literature and describes
experimental studies on the regulation and modification of
coronary flow and contractility in isolated rat hearts. In
chapter I and introduction is given to the problems of fatty
acid toxicity and myocardial function. Coronary flow rate and
pump function of the myocardium are mainly determined by the
contractile status of vascular smooth muscle cells and cardiac
striated muscle cells, respectively. Therefore in chapters II
and III morphological and (ultra)structural aspects of both
types of cells have been described.
In chapters IV and V functional and metabolic aspects of coronary
circulation and contractility are illustrated. In both vascular
smooth and cardiac striated muscle cells:
(i) the intracellular calcium concentration is the
main determinant of the contractile status of
actomyosin,
(ii) contraction takes place after the action potentialinduced
calcium-influx through the plasmamembrane
and calcium release from intracellular stores
(sarcoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria),
(iii) relaxation is achieved after reduction of the cytoplasmic
calcium level by calcium-pump systems in
the plasmamembrane, sarcoplasmic reticulum and
mitochondria,
(iv) calcium-ions trigger the coupling between the
contraction-relaxation cycle with energy metabolism
since glycogenolysis and lipolysis are both
stimulated by calcium.