PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

How similar are the mice to men? Between-species comparison of left ventricular mechanics using strain imaging.

  • Kenya Kusunose,
  • Marc S Penn,
  • Youhua Zhang,
  • Yuanna Cheng,
  • James D Thomas,
  • Thomas H Marwick,
  • Zoran B Popović

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040061
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
p. e40061

Abstract

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BackgroundWhile mammalian heart size maintains constant proportion to whole body size, scaling of left ventricular (LV) function parameters shows a more complex scaling pattern. We used 2-D speckle tracking strain imaging to determine whether LV myocardial strains and strain rates scale to heart size.MethodsWe studied 18 mice, 15 rats, 6 rabbits, 12 dogs and 20 human volunteers by 2-D echocardiography. Relationship between longitudinal or circumferential strains/strain rates (S(Long)/SR(Long), S(Circ)/SR(Circ)), and LV end-diastolic volume (EDV) or mass were assessed by the allometric (power-law) equation Y = kM(β).ResultsMean LV mass in individual species varied from 0.038 to 134 g, LV EDV varied from 0.015 to 102 ml, while RR interval varied from 81 to 1090 ms. While S(Long) increased with increasing LV EDV or mass (β values 0.047±0.006 and 0.051±0.005, p0.0003 for both).ConclusionsWhile S(Circ) is unchanged, S(Long) increases with increasing heart size, indicating that large mammals rely more on long axis contribution to systolic function. SR(Long) and SR(Circ), both diastolic and systolic, show an expected decrease with increasing heart size.