Abstract
Myocardial fiber orientation was examined in transmural specimens obtained at the maximum diameter of the left ventricle from five dogs with pressure-overload hypertrophy produced by aortic stenosis, six dogs with volume-overload hypertrophy due to an arteriovenous fistula, and six exercise-hypertrophied greyhounds trained for racing. Hearts arrested in diastole were fixed in situ while the operating end-diastolic pressure was maintained. Fiber orientation changed smoothly from about +60 degrees (with respect to the equator) at the endocardium to about -69 degrees at the epicardium. The majority of fibers near the midwall were oriented circumferentially. These findings are quite similar to those previously reported for normal dogs. In comparison to normals, the left ventricles from dogs with pressure-overload had an increase in longitudinally oriented fibers, i.e. fiber angles between -67.5 degrees and -90 degrees and between +67.5 degrees and +90 degrees; these fibers comprised 10.4 +/- 1.8% of the total fibers in dogs with aortic stenosis vs. 2.9 +/- 1.8% of total fibers in normal dogs (P less than 0.001). Neither the dogs with volume-overload hypertrophy nor exercise-trained animals were significantly different from normals.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
29 articles.
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