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Medicineworld.org: Preventing a broken heart
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Preventing a broken heart
A heart damaged by heart attack is commonly broken, at least partially, for good. The injury causes excessive scar tissue to form, and this plays a role in permanently keeping heart muscle from working at full capacity.
The findings offer heartening news for the millions who have heart attacks each year and suffer from the resulting poor heart function. The study raises the hope that the outlook for people with this major disability might be markedly improved. The researchers studied a protein, sFRP2, which they unexpectedly found to be involved in the formation of collagen, the main component of scar tissue. "With a number of injuries and diseases, large amounts of collagen are formed and deposited in tissues, leading to scarring and a condition called fibrosis," explains co-author Daniel S. Greenspan, professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at the UW School of Medicine and Public Health. "Fibrosis can seriously affect the functioning of heart, lung, liver and other tissues". Greenspan, an expert on collagen, joined with Thomas Sato of Weill Cornell Medical College to study mice that don't produce sFRP2 to understand how the protein works. When the researchers restricted blood flow to the animals' hearts, mimicking a heart attack, they observed that scarring was significantly reduced in these sFRP2-free animals. "Importantly, we observed that when we reduced the level of fibrosis, heart function significantly improved in the mice," says Greenspan, also a professor of pharmacology at UW-Madison. Identifying agents that specifically target sFRP2 and halt its activity will be a promising approach to controlling heart attack-induced scarring and impaired heart function, says Greenspan, and his lab has begun the search. The UW researchers also hope to study how sFRP2 and other proteins that enhance collagen formation may interact. The protein may also be important in treating other diseases resulting in severe fibrosis, adds Greenspan, including liver cirrhosis and interstitial lung disease. Posted by: Daniel Source
Did you know?
A heart damaged by heart attack is commonly broken, at least partially, for good. The injury causes excessive scar tissue to form, and this plays a role in permanently keeping heart muscle from working at full capacity. Now scientists have identified a key molecule involved in controlling excessive scar tissue formation in mice following a heart attack. When they stopped the scarring from occurring, the researchers observed that the animals' heart function greatly improved following the injury.
Medicineworld.org: Preventing a broken heart
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