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Abstract
Diminished cardiac vagal activity and higher heart rate predict a high mortality rate
of chronic heart failure (CHF) after myocardial infarction. We investigated the effects
of chronic electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve on cardiac remodeling and long-term
survival in an animal model of CHF after large myocardial infarction.
Two weeks after the ligation of the left coronary artery, surviving rats were randomized
to vagal- and sham-stimulated groups. Using an implantable miniature radio-controlled
electrical stimulator, we stimulated the right vagal nerve of CHF rats for 6 weeks.
The intensity of electrical stimulation was adjusted for each rat, so that the heart
rate was lowered by 20 to 30 beats per minute. The treated rats had significantly
lower left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (17.1+/-5.9 versus 23.5+/-4.2 mm Hg,
P<0.05) and higher maximum dp/dt of left ventricular pressure (4152+/-237 versus 2987+/-192
mm Hg/s, P<0.05) than the untreated rats. Improvement of cardiac pumping function
was accompanied by a decrease in normalized biventricular weight (2.75+/-0.25 versus
3.14+/-0.22 g/kg, P<0.01). Although the 140-day survival of the untreated group was
only half, vagal stimulation markedly improved the survival rate (86% versus 50%,
P=0.008). Vagal stimulation therapy achieved a 73% reduction in a relative risk ratio
of death.
Vagal nerve stimulation markedly improved the long-term survival of CHF rats through
the prevention of pumping failure and cardiac remodeling.
[1
]From the Department of Cardiovascular Dynamics, National Cardiovascular Center Research
Institute, Suita, Japan (M.L., C.Z., T.S., T.K., M.S., K.S.); and the Department of
Cardiovascular Control, Kochi Medical School, Nankoku, Japan (T.S.).