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Hypoxia Attenuates Pressure Overload-Induced Heart Failure. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Alveolar hypoxia may help protect the heart from failure caused by left ventricular pressure overload (LVPO), although the specific mechanisms behind this protection are not fully understood.
  • A new mouse model (HxTAC) was created that combines chronic hypoxia with LVPO, showing resistance to heart failure and identifying key protective mechanisms such as enhanced angiogenesis and preserved metabolic function.
  • Findings suggest that hypoxia reduces the impact of LVPO-induced heart failure and may also play a role in recovery after heart failure treatments like left ventricular assist devices, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic target.

Article Abstract

Background: Alveolar hypoxia is protective in the context of cardiovascular and ischemic heart disease; however, the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. The present study sought to test the hypothesis that hypoxia is cardioprotective in left ventricular pressure overload (LVPO)-induced heart failure. We furthermore aimed to test that overlapping mechanisms promote cardiac recovery in heart failure patients following left ventricular assist device-mediated mechanical unloading and circulatory support.

Methods And Results: We established a novel murine model of combined chronic alveolar hypoxia and LVPO following transverse aortic constriction (HxTAC). The HxTAC model is resistant to cardiac hypertrophy and the development of heart failure. The cardioprotective mechanisms identified in our HxTAC model include increased activation of HIF (hypoxia-inducible factor)-1α-mediated angiogenesis, attenuated induction of genes associated with pathological remodeling, and preserved metabolic gene expression as identified by RNA sequencing. Furthermore, LVPO decreased and increased mRNA expression under normoxic conditions, which was attenuated under hypoxic conditions and may induce additional hypoxia-mediated cardioprotective effects. Analysis of samples from patients with advanced heart failure that demonstrated left ventricular assist device-mediated myocardial recovery revealed a similar expression pattern for and as observed in HxTAC hearts.

Conclusions: Hypoxia attenuates LVPO-induced heart failure. Cardioprotective pathways identified in the HxTAC model might also contribute to cardiac recovery following left ventricular assist device support. These data highlight the potential of our novel HxTAC model to identify hypoxia-mediated cardioprotective mechanisms and therapeutic targets that attenuate LVPO-induced heart failure and mediate cardiac recovery following mechanical circulatory support.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11056135PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.123.033553DOI Listing

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