4.5 Article

Ghrelin Supresses Sympathetic Hyperexcitation in Acute Heart Failure in Male Rats: Assessing Centrally and Peripherally Mediated Pathways

Journal

ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 156, Issue 9, Pages 3309-3316

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/EN.2015-1333

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
  2. Department of Physiology, Otago University, New Zealand
  3. Intramural Research Fund for Cardiovascular Diseases of the National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center [22-2-3, 25-3-1]
  4. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Sciences, and Technology of Japan [E056, 26670413]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26670413] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The hormone ghrelin prevents a dangerous increase in cardiac sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) after acute myocardial infarction (MI), although the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. This study aimed to determine whether ghrelin's sympathoinhibitory properties stem either from directly within the central nervous system, or via modulation of specific cardiac vagal inhibitory afferents. Cardiac SNA was recorded in urethane-anesthetized rats for 3 hours after the ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery (ie, MI). Rats received ghrelin either sc (150 mu g/kg) or intracerebroventricularly (5 mu g/kg) immediately after the MI. In another two groups, the cervical vagi were denervated prior to the MI, followed by sc injection of either ghrelin or placebo. Acute MI induced a 188% increase in cardiac SNA, which was significantly attenuated in ghrelin-treated rats for both sc or intracerebroventricularly administration (36% and 76% increase, respectively). Consequently, mortality (47%) and the incidence of arrhythmic episodes (12 per 2 h) were improved with both routes of ghrelin administration (<13% and less than five per 2 h, respectively). Bilateral vagotomy significantly attenuated the cardiac SNA response to acute MI (99% increase). Ghrelin further attenuated the sympathetic response to MI in vagotomized rats so that the SNA response was comparable between vagotomized and vagal-intact MI rats treated with ghrelin. These results suggest that ghrelin may act primarily via a central pathway within the brain to suppress SNA after MI, although peripheral vagal afferent pathways may also contribute in part. The exact region(s) within the central nervous system whereby ghrelin inhibits SNA remains to be fully elucidated.

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