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Damaged Hearts pump better when fueled with
Fats
Newswise,
May 6, 2011 — Contrary to what we’ve been
told, eliminating or severely limiting fats
from the diet may not be beneficial to
cardiac function in patients suffering from
heart failure, a study at Case Western
Reserve University School of Medicine
reports.
Results from biological model studies
conducted by assistant professor of
physiology and biophysics Margaret Chandler,
PhD, and other researchers, demonstrate that
a high-fat diet improved overall mechanical
function, in other words, the heart’s
ability to pump, and was accompanied by
cardiac insulin resistance.
“Does that mean I can go out and eat my Big
Mac after I have a heart attack,” Dr.
Chandler says “No, but treatments that act
to provide sufficient energy to the heart
and allow the heart to utilize or to
maintain its normal metabolic profile may
actually be advantageous.”
The research, published in American
Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory
Physiology, suggests that for a damaged
heart, a balanced diet that includes mono-
and polyunsaturated fats, and which replaces
simple sugars (sucrose and fructose) with
complex carbohydrates, may be beneficial.
In a healthy person, the heart uses both
fats and carbohydrates to obtain the energy
it needs to continue pumping blood 24/7.
Ideally, fats are utilized because they
yield more energy. However, if a person
develops heart failure (or suffers from
ischemia – a lack of blood supply), the
heart seems to prefer using glucose for
fuel, because glucose requires less oxygen
to produce energy.
While heart disease remains the leading
cause of death in the United States, more
people are surviving heart attacks that ever
before. Survivors though pay a price for
this improved survival, living with a
damaged heart that usually progresses to
heart failure. And unfortunately,
medications and procedures have yet to
“cure” heart failure, or halt the
deterioration of heart function.
Upon initiation of these dietary
intervention studies, researchers previously
thought a high-fat diet fed to animal models
that have suffered a heart attack, would
overload their tissues with fat, which in
turn would have a toxic effect on their
hearts. Surprisingly, the heart’s pump
function improved on the high-fat diet.
Through further testing, the researchers
found that animal models suffering from
heart failure and receiving a low fat diet
were able to produce insulin and take up
glucose from the blood, just as healthy
hearts do.
However, the biological models with heart
failure that were fed high-fat diets showed
signs of insulin resistance, exhibited by a
decreased amount of glucose taken up by the
heart, as might be expected in a diabetic
patient.
One of the main implications of these
findings is that contrary to previously held
beliefs, a state of insulin-resistance might
actually be beneficial to a failing heart.
The hypothesis, according to Dr. Chandler,
is that because the heart is being provided
with excess amounts of fats, it is forced to
utilize its preferred energy source. After
suffering an injury that leads to failure,
the heart cannot do this on its own, so the
researchers have to manipulate its
metabolism to use the energy source that
maximizes or maintain its function as near
to “normal” as possible.
“We want to provide an environment for the
heart which allows it to be as effective and
efficient a pump as possible, regardless of
the damage it has undergone,” Dr. Chandler
says.
This study was funded by the National
Institutes of Health, the American Heart
Association, and the Case Center for Imaging
Research.
About Case Western Reserve University School
of Medicine
Founded in 1843, Case Western Reserve
University School of Medicine is the largest
medical research institution in Ohio and is
among the nation’s top medical schools for
research funding from the National
Institutes of Health. The School of Medicine
is recognized throughout the international
medical community for outstanding
achievements in teaching. The School’s
innovative and pioneering Western Reserve2
curriculum interweaves four themes--research
and scholarship, clinical mastery,
leadership, and civic professionalism--to
prepare students for the practice of
evidence-based medicine in the rapidly
changing health care environment of the 21st
century. Nine Nobel Laureates have been
affiliated with the school of medicine.
Annually, the School of Medicine trains more
than 800 MD and MD/PhD students and ranks in
the top 25 among U.S. research-oriented
medical schools as designated by U.S. News &
World Report “Guide to Graduate Education.”
The School of Medicine’s primary affiliate
is University Hospitals Case Medical Center
and is additionally affiliated with
MetroHealth Medical Center, the Louis Stokes
Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs
Medical Center, and the Cleveland Clinic,
with which it established the Cleveland
Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case
Western Reserve University in 2002. http://casemed.case.edu.
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