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Circulation April 07, 2020 Issue

Circulation April 07, 2020 Issue

FromCirculation on the Run


Circulation April 07, 2020 Issue

FromCirculation on the Run

ratings:
Length:
22 minutes
Released:
Apr 6, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Dr Carolyn Lam: Welcome to Circulation on the Run, your weekly podcast summary and backstage pass to the journal and its editors. I'm Dr Carolyn Lam, Associate Editor from the National Heart Center and Duke National University of Singapore. Dr Greg Hundley: I'm Greg Hundley, associate editor from the VCU Pauley Heart Center in Richmond, Virginia. Dr Carolyn Lam: Greg today's speaker paper is all about soy products and whether or not there is a benefit with them with regards to risk of coronary heart disease. Now, this has been extremely controversial and today's speech or paper is really important in its findings. Ha ha, I bet you want to get to it right now but I'm going to say, hold on let's get to some other really interesting papers in this series first. Can I start off? You got your coffee? Dr Greg Hundley: Yes. Let's get going Carolyn. Dr Carolyn Lam: So the first paper I want to highlight really talks about myocardial energetics in obesity, and you're going to love this one Greg it's got some really cool MRI techniques. We know that obesity is strongly associated with exercise intolerance and the development of heart failure particularly HFpEF. Well Dr Rayner from University of Oxford and colleagues looked at this carefully in 80 volunteers, which included 35 controls with an average BMI of 24 and 45 obese individuals with an average BMI of 35, who did not have coexisting cardiovascular disease. Now, these participants underwent body composition analysis and MRI of the abdominal liver and myocardial fat content, left ventricular function and 31 Phosphorus Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy to assess Phosphocreatine ATP and Creatine Kinase Kinetics at rest and during Dobutamine Stress. Dr Greg Hundley: Oh, wow Carolyn, this is right up my alley. You've got MRI imaging for body composition coupled with MR spectroscopy for metabolism, so what did they find? Dr Carolyn Lam: Thanks for putting that simply for us Greg. They found that in the obese resting heart, the myocardial creatine kinase reaction rate is increase, maintaining ATP delivery despite reduced energy stores during increased workload. While the non obese heart increases ATP delivery through creatine kinase the obese heart does not, and this is associated with reduced systolic augmentation and exercise tolerance. Weight Loss reversed these energetic changes, so these findings really highlight myocardial energy delivery via creatine kinase as a potential therapeutic strategy to improve symptoms in obesity related heart disease, as well as a fascinating modifiable pathway involved in the progression to heart failure. Now with this paper the central illustration is so critical, everybody has to pick up that issue and have a look. Furthermore, you must read the elegant editorial by Barry Borlaug and Craig Malloy. Dr Greg Hundley: Oh, you bet Carolyn. Craig always puts these MR spectroscopy papers in such fantastic perspective, really looking forward to that read and such an elegant study. Now, we haven't had Carolyn's quiz in weeks and we're going to get into one. This paper comes from Professor Nina Wettschureck, from the Max-Planck-Institute for Heart and Lung research, and it pertains to the infamous G-protein coupled receptors. Now, Carolyn here's your quiz and guess what, it's just multiple choice. All you have to do is fill in the blank. Dr Carolyn Lam: On G-protein coupled receptors? Dr Greg Hundley: Yeah, I know it's... we know a lot about these, but we're going to learn. So, G-protein coupled receptors are the largest family of transmembrane receptors in eukaryotes. They transduce signals of numerous physio-chemical stimuli including... and Carolyn you have to complete this sentence. So it's neurotransmitters, hormones, local mediators, metabolic or olfactory cues and got to complete the sentence. Is it air resistance? Time? Or light? Dr Carolyn Lam: Space. Dr Greg Hundley: That's not a choice. Dr Carolyn Lam: All right, all right let me guess light. Dr Greg H
Released:
Apr 6, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Each 15-minute podcast begins with an overview of the issue’s contents and main take-home messages for busy clinicians on the run. This is followed by a deep dive into a featured article of particular clinical significance: views will be heard from both author and editor teams for a “behind the scenes” look at the publication. Expect a fun, highly conversational and clinically-focused session each week!