Generic placeholder image

Current Pharmaceutical Design

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1381-6128
ISSN (Online): 1873-4286

Physiological Basis for Contractile Dysfunction in Heart Failure

Author(s): Luciano Dalla Libera, Giorgio Vescovo and Maurizio Volterrani

Volume 14, Issue 25, 2008

Page: [2572 - 2581] Pages: 10

DOI: 10.2174/138161208786071254

Price: $65

Abstract

The purpose of this review is to enlighten the mechanisms of skeletal muscle dysfunction in heart failure. The muscle hypothesis suggests that chronic heart failure (CHF) symptoms, dyspnoea and fatigue are due to skeletal muscle alterations. Hyperventilation due to altered ergoreflex seems to be the cause of shortness of breath. Qualitative and quantitative changes occurring in the skeletal muscle, such as muscle wastage and shift from slow to fast fibers type, are likely to be responsible for fatigue. Mechanisms leading to muscle wastage in chronic heart failure, include cytokine-triggered skeletal muscle apoptosis, but also ubiquitin/proteasome and non-ubiquitin-dependent pathways. The regulation of fibre type involves the growth hormone/insulin-like growth factor 1/calcineurin/ transcriptional coactivator PGC1 cascade. The imbalance between protein synthesis and degradation plays an important role. Protein degradation can occur through ubiquitin-dependent and non-ubiquit-independent pathways. Systems controlling ubiquitin/ proteasome activation have been described. These are triggered by tumour necrosis factor and growth hormone/ insulin-like growth factor 1. However, an important role is played by apoptosis. In humans, and experimental models of heart failure, programmed cell death has been found in skeletal muscle and interstitial cells. Apoptosis is triggered by tumour necrosis factor and in vitro experiments have shown that it can be induced by its second messenger sphingosine. Apoptosis correlates with the severity of the heart failure syndrome. It involves activation of caspases 3 and 9 and mitochondrial cytochrome c release. Sarcomeric protein oxidation and its consequent contractile impairment can form another cause of skeletal muscle dysfunction in CHF.

Keywords: Heart failure, skeletal muscle, apoptosis, oxidative stress, atrophy, cytokines


Rights & Permissions Print Cite
© 2024 Bentham Science Publishers | Privacy Policy