BMC Cardiovascular Disorders (Dec 2006)

Cardiac involvement in Beagle-based canine X-linked muscular dystrophy in Japan (CXMD<sub>J</sub>): electrocardiographic, echocardiographic, and morphologic studies

  • Machida Noboru,
  • Takahashi Akio,
  • Tomohiro Masayuki,
  • Shimatsu Yoshiki,
  • Nakura Masao,
  • Wada Michiko R,
  • Yuasa Katsutoshi,
  • Yoshimura Madoka,
  • Fujii Yoko,
  • Urasawa Nobuyuki,
  • Yugeta Naoko,
  • Wakao Yoshito,
  • Nakamura Akinori,
  • Takeda Shin'ichi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2261-6-47
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. 47

Abstract

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Abstract Background Cardiac mortality in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) has recently become important, because risk of respiratory failure has been reduced due to widespread use of the respirator. The cardiac involvement is characterized by distinctive electrocardiographic abnormalities or dilated cardiomyopathy, but the pathogenesis has remained obscure. In research on DMD, Golden retriever-based muscular dystrophy (GRMD) has attracted much attention as an animal model because it resembles DMD, but GRMD is very difficult to maintain because of their severe phenotypes. We therefore established a line of dogs with Beagle-based canine X-linked muscular dystrophy in Japan (CXMDJ) and examined the cardiac involvement. Methods The cardiac phenotypes of eight CXMDJ and four normal male dogs 2 to 21 months of age were evaluated using electrocardiography, echocardiography, and histopathological examinations. Results Increases in the heart rate and decreases in PQ interval compared to a normal littermate were detected in two littermate CXMDJ dogs at 15 months of age or older. Distinct deep Q-waves and increase in Q/R ratios in leads II, III, and aVF were detected by 6–7 months of age in all CXMDJ dogs. In the echocardiogram, one of eight of CXMDJ dogs showed a hyperechoic lesion in the left ventricular posterior wall at 5 months of age, but the rest had not by 6–7 months of age. The left ventricular function in the echocardiogram indicated no abnormality in all CXMDJ dogs by 6–7 months of age. Histopathology revealed myocardial fibrosis, especially in the left ventricular posterobasal wall, in three of eight CXMDJ dogs by 21 months of age. Conclusion Cardiac involvement in CXMDJ dogs is milder and has slower progression than that described in GRMD dogs. The distinct deep Q-waves have been ascribed to myocardial fibrosis in the posterobasal region of the left ventricle, but our data showed that they precede the lesion on echocardiogram and histopathology. These findings imply that studies of CXMDJ may reveal not only another causative mechanism of the deep Q-waves but also more information on the pathogenesis in the dystrophin-deficient heart.