AI Article Synopsis

  • Obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes are serious comorbidities linked to higher mortality in ischemic heart disease and contribute to heart failure after a heart attack.
  • Researchers employed a murine model of diet-induced obesity to investigate how obesity affects the body's response to heart injury, revealing that obese mice had increased inflammation and abnormal heart remodeling after injury.
  • The study demonstrated significant differences in immune responses and structural changes in the heart of diet-induced obese mice versus lean mice, helping to uncover mechanisms that could link obesity to poorer heart health.

Article Abstract

Epidemiological studies indicate that obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes are important comorbidities of patients with ischemic heart disease and increase mortality and development of congestive heart failure after myocardial infarction. Although ob/ob and db/db mice are commonly used to study obesity with insulin resistance or diabetes, mutations in the leptin gene or its receptor are rarely the cause of obesity in humans, which is, instead, primarily a consequence of dietary and lifestyle factors. Therefore, we used a murine model of diet-induced obesity to examine the physiological effects of obesity and the inflammatory and healing response of diet-induced obese (DIO) mice after myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury. DIO mice developed hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance and hepatic steatosis, with significant ectopic lipid deposition in the heart and cardiac hypertrophy in the absence of significant changes in blood pressure. The mRNA levels of chemokines at 24 h and cytokines at 24 and 72 h of reperfusion were higher in DIO than in lean mice. In granulation tissue at 72 h of reperfusion, macrophage density was significantly increased, whereas neutrophil density was reduced, in DIO mice compared with lean mice. At 7 days of reperfusion, collagen deposition in the scar was significantly reduced and left ventricular (LV) dilation and cardiac hypertrophy were increased, indicative of adverse LV remodeling, in infarcted DIO mice. Characterization of a murine diet-induced model of obesity and insulin resistance that satisfies many aspects commonly observed in human obesity allows detailed examination of the adverse cardiovascular effects of diet-induced obesity at the molecular level.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00322.2006DOI Listing

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