Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (ventricular dilatation)
2,163 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Congestive heart failure is often preceded by a latent or preclinical phase in which patients are relatively asymptomatic. During this period, there is neuroendocrine activation, left ventricular dysfunction, and remodeling of the heart. The extent to which these activities are interrelated is unclear, but it appears from experimental studies that myocardial damage is associated with chronic sympathetic nervous system activation, left ventricular hypertrophy, and a subsequent increase in left ventricular volume. The nondamaged myocardial tissue demonstrates enhanced messenger RNA for angiotensinogen and angiotensin converting enzyme activity. Angiotensin II along with other trophic signals may prime the cell for "growth." Alteration of left ventricular function may produce unusual loading conditions on the myocardium. Stretch of membrane-bound ion channels may impart mechanical signals that may be transduced and expressed as cellular hypertrophy. Interstitial collagenase may be activated, leading to disruption of the collagen-supporting network. Elongated cells (eccentric hypertrophy), cell slippage, and cell dropout may contribute to the dilatative process. The end product is cardiac dilatation, inefficient left ventricular performance, and congestive heart failure. We have observed that an increase in left ventricular mass is the initial morphological response to acute myocardial damage in a canine model. This occurs at 1 week and is followed by progressive activation of the sympathetic nervous system, left ventricular dilatation, and modest left ventricular dysfunction, a condition that mimics preclinical heart failure in patients. The remodeling process in the canine model, including the increase in mass and volume, may be blocked by angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Neurohumoral activation in preclinical heart failure. Remodeling and the potential for intervention. 809 70

The cardiovascular interstitial space is largely composed of type I and III fibrillar collagens. Tissue structure, form and function are determined not only by the collagen content but also by the ratio of different collagens to each other. Matrix metalloproteinases are members of a family of secreted and membrane-bound enzymes that are capable of degrading highly proteolytic resistant fibrillar type I and III collagens. Collagen tissue content is determined by balanced collagen synthesis and degradation. MMP activity and adverse tissue remodeling have been identified in coronary plaques in unstable angina. It has also been linked with the progression of aortic aneurysms and with left ventricular dilatation in congestive heart failure in patients with ischemic and non-ischemic cardiomyopathy. The role of MMPs in these cardiovascular diseases and possible therapeutic options are the focus of this review.
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PMID:[Significance of matrix metalloproteinases in cardiovascular diseases]. 1109 46