Retained Metabolic Flexibility of the Failing Human Heart

Author:

Watson William D.12ORCID,Green Peregrine G.13,Lewis Andrew J.M.1ORCID,Arvidsson Per14ORCID,De Maria Giovanni Luigi5,Arheden Håkan4ORCID,Heiberg Einar4,Clarke William T.6ORCID,Rodgers Christopher T.7ORCID,Valkovič Ladislav18ORCID,Neubauer Stefan1ORCID,Herring Neil3ORCID,Rider Oliver J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Oxford Centre for Magnetic Resonance Research (W.D.W., P.G.G., A.J.M.L., P.A., L.V., S.N., O.J.R.), University of Oxford, UK.

2. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine (W.D.W.), University of Cambridge, UK.

3. Department for Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics (P.G.G., N.H.), University of Oxford, UK.

4. Clinical Physiology, Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Lund University, Skåne University Hospital, Lund, Sweden (P.A., H.A., E.H.).

5. Department of Cardiology, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK (G.L.D.M.).

6. Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, FMRIB, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences (W.T.C.), University of Oxford, UK.

7. Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre (C.T.R.), University of Cambridge, UK.

8. Institute of Measurement Science, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia (L.V.).

Abstract

Background: The failing heart is traditionally described as metabolically inflexible and oxygen starved, causing energetic deficit and contractile dysfunction. Current metabolic modulator therapies aim to increase glucose oxidation to increase oxygen efficiency of adenosine triphosphate production, with mixed results. Methods: To investigate metabolic flexibility and oxygen delivery in the failing heart, 20 patients with nonischemic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (left ventricular ejection fraction 34.9±9.1) underwent separate infusions of insulin+glucose infusion (I+G) or Intralipid infusion. We used cardiovascular magnetic resonance to assess cardiac function and measured energetics using phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy. To investigate the effects of these infusions on cardiac substrate use, function, and myocardial oxygen uptake (MV o 2 ), invasive arteriovenous sampling and pressure–volume loops were performed (n=9). Results: At rest, we found that the heart had considerable metabolic flexibility. During I+G, cardiac glucose uptake and oxidation were predominant (70±14% total energy substrate for adenosine triphosphate production versus 17±16% for Intralipid; P =0.002); however, no change in cardiac function was seen relative to basal conditions. In contrast, during Intralipid infusion, cardiac long-chain fatty acid (LCFA) delivery, uptake, LCFA acylcarnitine production, and fatty acid oxidation were all increased (LCFA 73±17% of total substrate versus 19±26% total during I+G; P =0.009). Myocardial energetics were better with Intralipid compared with I+G (phosphocreatine/adenosine triphosphate 1.86±0.25 versus 2.01±0.33; P =0.02), and systolic and diastolic function were improved (LVEF 34.9±9.1 baseline, 33.7±8.2 I+G, 39.9±9.3 Intralipid; P <0.001). During increased cardiac workload, LCFA uptake and oxidation were again increased during both infusions. There was no evidence of systolic dysfunction or lactate efflux at 65% maximal heart rate, suggesting that a metabolic switch to fat did not cause clinically meaningful ischemic metabolism. Conclusions: Our findings show that even in nonischemic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction with severely impaired systolic function, significant cardiac metabolic flexibility is retained, including the ability to alter substrate use to match both arterial supply and changes in workload. Increasing LCFA uptake and oxidation is associated with improved myocardial energetics and contractility. Together, these findings challenge aspects of the rationale underlying existing metabolic therapies for heart failure and suggest that strategies promoting fatty acid oxidation may form the basis for future therapies.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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