Author:
Crandall D. L.,Goldstein B. M.,Lizzo F. H.,Lozito R. J.,Cervoni P.
Abstract
An experimental model for investigating the disparate effects of obesity and hypertension on the heart was developed by ligation of the aorta of male Sprague-Dawley rats made obese through ad libitum feeding. Experimental obesity was associated with an increased body fat and cardiac muscle mass, yet a normotensive systemic arterial pressure. Aortic ligation produced an elevated mean arterial pressure and resting heart rate, whereas body weight was similar to that of normotensive lean control rats. Obesity and hypertension together were associated with a significantly increased percent body fat, mean arterial pressure, and left ventricular mass compared with lean controls, whereas pressure and left ventricular weight were greater than those observed in rats with only obesity or hypertension. Cardiac adaptations corrected for body weight indicated that left ventricular weight increased as a function of body weight and body fat, but hypertension produced left ventricular adaptations independent of these variables. These initial studies indicate an additional contribution of hypertension to the left ventricular adaptations of obesity, and this model could therefore be used in future investigations concerning the cardiovascular effects of the simultaneous occurrence of these separate diseases.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
3 articles.
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