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How Similar Are the Mice to Men? Between-Species Comparison of Left Ventricular Mechanics Using Strain Imaging.

Authors :
Kusunose, Kenya
Penn, Marc S.
Youhua Zhang
Yuanna Cheng
Thomas, James D.
Marwick, Thomas H.
Popović, Zoran B.
Source :
PLoS ONE; Jun2012, Vol. 7 Issue 6, p1-9, 9p
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Background: While mammalian heart size maintains constant proportion to whole body size, scaling of left ventricular (LV) function parameters shows a more complex scaling pattern. We used 2-D speckle tracking strain imaging to determine whether LV myocardial strains and strain rates scale to heart size. Methods: We studied 18 mice, 15 rats, 6 rabbits, 12 dogs and 20 human volunteers by 2-D echocardiography. Relationship between longitudinal or circumferential strains/strain rates (S<subscript>Long</subscript>/SR<subscript>Long</subscript>, S<subscript>Circ</subscript>/SR<subscript>Circ</subscript>), and LV end-diastolic volume (EDV) or mass were assessed by the allometric (power-law) equation Y = kM<subscript>β</subscript>. Results: Mean LV mass in individual species varied from 0.038 to 134 g, LV EDV varied from 0.015 to 102 ml, while RR interval varied from 81 to 1090 ms. While S<subscript>Long</subscript> increased with increasing LV EDV or mass (β values 0.047±0.006 and 0.051±0.005, p<0.0001 vs. 0 for both) S<subscript>Circ</subscript> was unchanged (p = NS for both LV EDV or mass). Systolic and diastolic SR<subscript>Long</subscript> and SR<subscript>Circ</subscript> showed inverse correlations to LV EDV or mass (p<0.0001 vs. 0 for all comparisons). The ratio between S<subscript>Long</subscript> and S<subscript>Circ</subscript> increased with increasing values of LV EDV or mass (β values 0.039±0.010 and 0.040±0.011, p<0.0003 for both). Conclusions: While S<subscript>Circ</subscript> is unchanged, S<subscript>Long</subscript> increases with increasing heart size, indicating that large mammals rely more on long axis contribution to systolic function. SR<subscript>Long</subscript> and SR<subscript>Circ</subscript>, both diastolic and systolic, show an expected decrease with increasing heart size. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
7
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
79827026
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040061