SEX-LINKED DIFFERENCES IN CARDIAC ATROPHY AFTER MECHANICAL UNLOADING INDUCED BY HETEROTOPIC HEART TRANSPLANTATION. (YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARD COMPETITION)

D. M. Kolesar, P. Kujal, I. Mrazova, M. Pokorný , P. Skaroupkova, J. Sadowski, L. Cervenka, I. Netuka (Praha, Prague, Warsaw, Poland)
Topic: Heart failure
Type: Presentation - doctors, CCVRID 2023

There is no information about possible sex-related differences in unloading-induced cardiac atrophy. We aimed to compare the course of unloading-induced cardiac atrophy in intact (without gonadectomy) male and female rats, and in animals after gonadectomy, in order to obtain insight into the influence of sex hormones on this process. Heterotopic heart transplantation (HT) was used as a model for heart unloading. Cardiac atrophy was assessed as the weight ratio of heterotopically transplanted heart weight (HW) to the native HW on days 7 and 14 after H T in intact male and female rats. In separate experimental groups, gonadectomy was performed in male and female recipient animals 28 days before HT and the course of cardiac atrophy was again evaluated on days 7 and 14 after HT. In intact male rats, HT resulted in significantly greater decreases in whole HW when compared to intact femalerats. The dynamics of the left ventricle (LV) and right ventricle (RV) atrophy after HT were quite similar ot that of whole hearts. Gonadectomy did not have any significanteffect on the decreases in whole HW, LV, and RV weights, with similar results in male and female rats. Our results show that the development of unloading-induced cardiac atrophy is substantially reduced in female rats when compared to male rats. Since gonadectomy did not alter the course of cardiac atrophy after HT, similarly in both male and female rats, we conclude that sex-linked differences ni the development of unloading-induced cardiac atrophy are not caused by the activity ofsex hormones.