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Remodeling of the rat right and left ventricles in experimental hypertension.
671
Citations
30
References
1990
Year
HypertensionHeart FailureCardiac AnatomyBiomedical EngineeringCardiovascular FunctionEnzyme Inhibitor CaptoprilRat RightAtherosclerosisCardiologyCardiac MechanicHealth SciencesVascular BiologyExperimental HypertensionCardiovascular DiseaseCardiac PhysiologyPhysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyMedicineCollagen Accumulation
Renovascular hypertension induces left ventricular hypertrophy with excess fibrillar collagen, yet the relative influence of pressure overload versus circulating angiotensin II and aldosterone remains uncertain. The study aimed to determine whether ventricular loading or circulating hormones drive hypertrophy and collagen deposition by comparing three hypertension models. Researchers examined renovascular hypertension, aortic banding, and chronic aldosterone infusion—each with distinct hormone profiles—and compared them to controls. Collagen increased in both ventricles during renovascular hypertension and aldosterone infusion but not with aortic banding, indicating that myocyte hypertrophy is driven by loading while collagen deposition is regulated by angiotensin II and aldosterone.
Pathological left ventricular hypertrophy in renovascular hypertension is associated with the accumulation of fibrillar collagen within the extracellular space and around intramyocardial coronary arteries. Even though the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor captopril was previously found to attenuate this interstitial and perivascular fibrosis, the relative importance of arterial and ventricular systolic pressures versus circulating angiotensin II (AII) and aldosterone (AL) in promoting hypertrophy and collagen accumulation in renovascular hypertension is uncertain. By drawing on the in-parallel arrangement of the right and left ventricles, with respect to their coronary circulation, and the in-series mechanical alignment of the ventricles, with a pressure-overloaded left and a normotensive right ventricle, this study sought to address this uncertainty. Three models of experimental hypertension, each having a different circulating AII and AL profile, were examined and compared with their controls: renovascular hypertension, where both AII and AL are increased; infrarenal aorta banding, where AII and AL are normal; and a chronic infusion of AL, where AII is suppressed or normal and AL is increased. In renovascular hypertension, as well as with AL, we found a significant rise in the interstitial collagen volume fraction and perivascular collagen area of the pressure-overloaded, hypertrophied left ventricle as well as the normotensive, nonhypertrophied right ventricle. This remodeling was not seen in either ventricle with infrarenal aorta banding despite comparable systemic hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy. Thus, in experimental arterial hypertension in the rat, myocyte and nonmyocyte compartments of the myocardium are under separate controls: myocyte hypertrophy is most closely related to ventricular loading while circulating AII and AL, acting alone or in concert with other humoral factors, regulate the accumulation of collagen within the right and left ventricles.
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