Ultrastructural, Functional, and Metabolic Correlates in the Ischemic Rat Heart

  • Feuvray D
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Abstract

A study correlating functional, metabolic, and ultrastructural changes in the ischemic heart was conducted on isolated working rat hearts, both in the presence and absence of fatty acid. Glucose alone (11 mM) or glucose plus palmitic acid (1.5 mM) were used as metabolic substrates. A 60-min period of whole-heart ischemia resulted in a more dramatic morphol. alteration in those hearts receiving palmitate than in those receiving no palmitate. In ischemic hearts receiving palmitate, intramitochondrial amorphous densities of both rounded and elongated types were observed These densities did not develop in hearts receiving glucose alone over the same period of ischemia. Such morphol. alterations were associated with a more severe deterioration of mech. function in the presence of palmitate. Biochem. determinations of fatty acid derivatives showed increased tissue levels of acyl CoA and acyl carnitine in ischemic hearts, but levels of long-chain acyl carnitine were much higher in those ischemic hearts receiving palmitate. In isolated mitochondria the level of long-chain acyl carnitine was ∼4-fold higher in the ischemic hearts receiving palmitate than in those receiving no palmitate. This great rise in mitochondrial levels of long-chain acyl carnitine correlated with modifications of the mitochondrial structure and with the appearance of amorphous densities.

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Feuvray, D. (1983). Ultrastructural, Functional, and Metabolic Correlates in the Ischemic Rat Heart. In Advances in Myocardiology (pp. 441–448). Springer US. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-4441-5_40

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