Echocardiography Differentiates Lethally Irradiated Whole-Body From Partial-Body Exposed Rats.

Front Cardiovasc Med

Hematology-Oncology Section, Department of Pediatrics, Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, United States.

Published: October 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute radiation syndrome (ARS) severity increases with the extent of body exposure, influencing survival chances and health complications.
  • The study proposes echocardiography to monitor cardiac and pulmonary function changes in irradiated animals, using rats exposed to lethal doses of radiation as a model.
  • Significant differences in cardiac function and blood characteristics were observed between whole body irradiated rats and those with only partial exposure, suggesting heart failure may be a cause of death, highlighting the need for treatments to mitigate cardiac-related mortality from radiation exposure.

Article Abstract

Acute radiation syndrome (ARS) affects morbidity and mortality dependent on the amount of body exposed. We propose the use of echocardiography (EC) to differentiate between survivors and non-survivors by measuring changes in cardiac function (CF) and pulmonary arterial function (PAF). We also investigate the role of rheology in our observed changes. Rats were irradiated to the whole body (WB) or partial body with two-legs shielded (2LS) at a lethal dose of 7.5Gy. EC and magnetic resonance imaging were performed, and rheological measurements conducted. Only 2LS survived past 12-days post-exposure and their CF and PAR were not significantly different from baseline. WB was significantly different from both baseline and 2LS in stroke volume ( < 0.05), velocity time integral (VTI; < 0.05) and pulmonary artery acceleration time (PAAT; < 0.05). Differences were identified as early as six-days post-exposure, where VTI and PAAT were significantly ( < 0.05) decreased in WB versus baseline but only PAAT was different from 2LS. Blood viscosity was significantly lower in the WB versus baseline and 2LS ( < 0.0001). WB exhibited a significant rise in dense red blood cells versus baseline ( < 0.01) and 2LS ( < 0.01). Cell-free hemoglobin, a contributor to pulmonary artery hypertension and vasculopathy, was significantly elevated in WB vs. sham. Non-invasive and readily available imaging can be used to identify critically affected victims. Our findings point to heart failure as one possible cause of death in WB exposed animals, potentially exacerbated by rheological, hemolytic, and pulmonary factors, and the importance of developing radiomitigators against cardiac ARS mortality.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6232677PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2018.00138DOI Listing

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