Cardiac beta-adrenergic neuroeffector systems in acute myocardial dysfunction related to brain injury. Evidence for catecholamine-mediated myocardial damage.
White M,
Wiechmann RJ,
Roden RL,
Hagan MB,
Wollmering MM,
Port JD,
Hammond E,
Abraham WT,
Wolfel EE,
Lindenfeld J, et al.
Division of Cardiology, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver 80262, USA.
BACKGROUND: Ten percent to 20% of potential cardiac donors with brain injury and no previous cardiac history have myocardial dysfunction. We assessed components of the beta-receptor-G-protein-adenylyl cyclase complex as well as the contractile response in 10 explanted acutely failing human hearts (donor heart dysfunction [DHD]) and compared the results with 13 age-matched nonfailing (NF) organ donor controls. METHODS AND RESULTS: As measured by echocardiography, all DHD hearts exhibited a decreased shortening fraction (16 +/- 2%, mean +/- SEM). Although total and subpopulation beta-receptor densities measured by [125I]iodocyanopindolol (ICYP) were similar in the DHD and NF groups, DHD hearts exhibited a 30% decrease in maximum isoproterenol-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity and a 50% decrease in the maximal response to zinterol. DHD hearts also exhibited decreases in adenylyl cyclase maximal stimulation by forskolin (211 +/- 25 [DHD] versus 295 +/- 23 [NF] pmol cAMP.min-1.mg-1, P < .05) and 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate (12.5 +/- 1.8 [DHD] versus 19.6 +/- 3.2 [NF] pmol cAMP.min-1.mg-1, P < .05), but there was no significant decrease in adenylyl cyclase stimulation by Mn2+, a direct activator of adenylyl cyclase. Right ventricular trabeculae removed from DHD hearts exhibited a profound decrease in the contractile response to isoproterenol (8.7 +/- 1 [DHD] versus 22 +/- 2 [NF] mN, P < .001) as well as reduced calcium responses (7.2 +/- 1.6 [DHD] versus 14 +/- 3 [NF] mN, P = .03). Morphological examination of two hearts revealed some ultrastructural evidence suggestive of catecholamine-mediated injury, but there was no difference in tissue creatine kinase activity between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with NF hearts, DHD hearts exhibit marked uncoupling of beta 1- and beta 2-adrenergic receptors from adenylyl cyclase and contractile response stimulation as well as decreased intrinsic systolic function. Thus, acute myocardial dysfunction accompanying brain injury is characterized by marked alterations in beta-adrenergic signal transduction as well as changes in the contractile apparatus, and this profile is markedly different from what occurs in the chronically failing human heart.
PMID: 7554200 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]