4.5 Article

Spinal Cord Injury Causes Systolic Dysfunction and Cardiomyocyte Atrophy

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages 424-434

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2017.4984

Keywords

contractility; pressure-volume relationship; spinal cord injury; sympathetic nervous system; ventricular function

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. University of British Columbia
  3. Rick Hansen Institute
  4. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research
  5. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada
  6. Craig H. Neilsen Foundation [261048]
  7. Kentucky Spinal Cord and Head Injury Research Trust [15-7]

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Individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI) have been shown to exhibit systolic, and to a lesser extent, diastolic cardiac dysfunction. However, previous reports of cardiac dysfunction in this population are confounded by the changing loading conditions after SCI and as such, whether cardiac dysfunction per se is present is still unknown. Therefore, our aim was to establish if load-independent cardiac dysfunction is present after SCI, to understand the functional cardiac response to SCI, and to explore the changes within the cellular milieu of the myocardium. Here, we applied in vivo echocardiography and left-ventricular (LV) pressure-volume catheterization with dobutamine infusions to our Wistar rodent model of cardiac dysfunction 5 weeks following high (T2) thoracic contusion SCI, while also examining the morphological and transcriptional alterations of cardiomyocytes. We found that SCI significantly impairs systolic function independent of loading conditions (end-systolic elastance in control: 1.35 +/- 0.15; SCI: 0.65 +/- 0.19mm Hg/mu L). The reduction in contractile indices is accompanied by a reduction in width and length of cardiomyocytes as well as alterations in the LV extracellular matrix. Importantly, we demonstrate that the reduction in the rate (dP/dt(max)) of LV pressure rise can be offset with beta-adrenergic stimulation, thereby experimentally implicating the loss of descending sympatho-excitatory control of the heart as a principle cause of LV dysfunction in SCI. Our data provide evidence that SCI induces systolic cardiac dysfunction independent of loading conditions and concomitant cardiomyocyte atrophy that may be underpinned by changes in the genes regulating the cardiac extracellular matrix.

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