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Ventricular reshaping with a beating heart implant improves pump function in experimental heart failure.


ABSTRACT:

Objective

The left ventricle remodels from an ellipsoidal/conical shape to a spherical shape after a myocardial infarction. The spherical ventricle is inefficient as a pumping chamber, has higher wall stresses, and can lead to congestive heart failure. We sought to investigate if restoring physiological ventricular shape with a beating heart implant improves pump function.

Methods

Rats were induced with a myocardial infarction, developing left ventricular dilatation and dysfunction, and becoming spherical over 3 weeks. Thereafter, they were randomized to undergo left ventricular reshaping with a beating heart implant (n = 19) or continue follow-up without an implant (n = 19). Biweekly echocardiography was performed until 12 weeks, with half the rats euthanized at 6 weeks and remaining at 12 weeks. At termination, invasive hemodynamic parameters and histopathology were performed.

Results

At 3 weeks after the infarction, rats had a 22% fall in ejection fraction, 31% rise in end diastolic volume, and 23% rise in sphericity. Transventricular implant reshaping reduced the volume by 12.6% and sphericity by 21%, restoring physiologic ventricular shape and wall stress. Over the 12-week follow-up, pump function improved significantly with better ventricular-vascular coupling in the reshaped hearts. In this group, cardiomyocyte cross-section area was higher and the cells were less elongated.

Conclusions

Reshaping a postinfarction, failing left ventricle to restore its physiological conical shape significantly improves long-term pump function.

SUBMITTER: Onohara D 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7925703 | biostudies-literature | 2022 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Ventricular reshaping with a beating heart implant improves pump function in experimental heart failure.

Onohara Daisuke D   Corporan Daniella M DM   Kono Takanori T   Kumar Sandeep S   Guyton Robert A RA   Padala Muralidhar M  

The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery 20200903 5


<h4>Objective</h4>The left ventricle remodels from an ellipsoidal/conical shape to a spherical shape after a myocardial infarction. The spherical ventricle is inefficient as a pumping chamber, has higher wall stresses, and can lead to congestive heart failure. We sought to investigate if restoring physiological ventricular shape with a beating heart implant improves pump function.<h4>Methods</h4>Rats were induced with a myocardial infarction, developing left ventricular dilatation and dysfunctio  ...[more]

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