Lu L, Xu Y, Zhu P, Greyson C, Schwartz G G
Cardiology Section, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center and University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado 80220, USA.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2001 Apr;280(4):H1513-8. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.2001.280.4.H1513.
Mechanical properties of the myocardium at end diastole have been thought to be dominated by passive material properties rather than by active sarcomere cross-bridge interactions. This study tested the hypothesis that residual cross-bridges significantly contribute to end-diastolic mechanics in vivo and that changes in end-diastolic cross-bridge interaction parallel concurrent changes in systolic cross-bridge interaction. Open-chest anesthetized pigs were treated with intracoronary verapamil (n = 7) or 2,3-butanedione monoxime (BDM; n = 8). Regional left ventricular external work and end-diastolic pressure (EDP) versus end-diastolic segment length (EDL) relations were determined in the treated and untreated regions of each heart. Both agents reduced external work of treated regions to 31-38% of baseline and concurrently shifted EDP versus EDL relations to the right (i.e., greater EDL at a given EDP) by an average of 5% (P < 0.05). During washout of the drugs, EDP versus EDL returned to baseline in parallel with recovery of external work. Sarcomere length, measured by transmission electron microscopy in BDM-treated and untreated regions of the same hearts after diastolic arrest and perfusion fixation, was 8% greater in BDM-treated regions (P < 0.01). We concluded that residual diastolic cross-bridges significantly and reversibly influence end-diastolic mechanics in vivo. Alterations of end-diastolic and systolic cross-bridge interactions occur in parallel.