Left ventricular torsion is equal in mice and humans.

Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol

Center for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, Cardiovascular Division, Barnes-Jewish Hospital at Washington University Medical Center, Missouri 63110, USA.

Published: April 2000

Global cardiac function has been studied in small animals with methods such as echocardiography, cine-magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and cardiac catheterization. However, these modalities make little impact on delineation of pathophysiology at the tissue level. The advantage of tagged cine-MRI technique is that the twisting motion of the ventricle, referred to as torsion, can be measured noninvasively, reflecting the underlying shearing motion of individual planes of myofibrils that generate wall thickening and ventricular ejection. Thus we sought to determine whether the mechanism of ventricular ejection, as measured by torsion, was the same in both humans and mice. Nine mice and ten healthy humans were studied with tagged cine-MRI. The magnitude and systolic time course of ventricular torsion were equivalent in mouse and humans, when normalized for heart rate and ventricular length. The end-systolic torsion angle was 12.7 +/- 1.7 degrees in humans vs. 2.0 +/- 1.5 degrees in mice unnormalized and 1.9 +/- 0.3 degrees /cm vs. 2.7 +/- 2.3 degrees /cm when normalized for ventricular length). These results support the premise that ventricular torsion may be a uniform measure of normal ventricular ejection across mammalian species and heart sizes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.2000.278.4.H1117DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

+/- degrees
16
ventricular torsion
12
ventricular ejection
12
tagged cine-mri
8
ventricular length
8
degrees /cm
8
ventricular
7
torsion
6
humans
5
left ventricular
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!