Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases Supplements | 2021
Obesity-prone rats fed with high-fat diet as a model of HFpEF
Abstract
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is a common and complex syndrome with high mortality and morbidity rates for which there are currently no evidence-based therapies. As patients with HFpEF very often harbor comorbidities of metabolic syndrome, we hypothesized, that metabolic syndrome in aging animals could be a major mechanism underlying the development of diastolic dysfunction and HFpEF. Therfeore, obesity-prone (OP) and -resistant (OR) rats were respectively fed with a high-fat diet (HFD) or a standard rat chow (Std) for 4\xa0months or for 12\xa0months (n\xa0=\xa010 rats in each group; 4 groups). At the end of the protocol, abdominal obesity, complete phenotyping of metabolic syndrome, associated to echocardiographic and left and right ventricular catheterization measurements, were performed. Blood was sampled before euthanasia of the animals. After 4- and 12-month HFD, OP rats presented increased total body and abdominal fat weights, altered glucose tolerance test and dyslipidemia. In OP rats, left ventricular systolic (164\xa0±\xa06 versus 120\xa0±\xa05\xa0mmHg, P\xa0 Metabolic syndrome induced by 12-month HFD in OP rats leads to the development of HFpEF. In these rats, circulating NT-proBNP levels were decreased, while circulating ST2 levels were largely increased.