The Energy Deprivation Hypothesis of heart failure, emphasized in the report of the NHLBI Special Emphasis Panel on Heart Failure Research, proposes that limitation in energy transfer is present in chronic heart failure (CHF) and contributes mechanistically to contractile dysfunction. Energy production in the heart is the highest of any organ and supports cardiac function at rest and with physical activity. ATP is the biochemical fuel for nearly all energy-requiring reactions. Creatine phosphate (PCr) is the major cardiac energy reserve and can rapidly re-generate ATP via the creatine kinase (CK) reaction. 31P magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy is the only non-invasive means for quantifying ATP and PCr in the human heart and has demonstrated reduced high-energy phosphates in animal models of CHF and in CHF patients. Although the rates of ATP turnover are critical for testing this hypothesis, it has not been previously possible to measure ATP flux through cardiac CK in humans. During the first three years of the current grant, novel MR saturation transfer methods were developed that allow, for the first time, measurements of ATP synthesis rates through CK in human hearts. The overall aim of this proposal is to exploit these new techniques so that measures of cardiac CK flux can be integrated with imaging assessment of function to describe mechano-energetic coupling, whether and how it differs in CHF patients, and whether interventions designed to alter the relationship can improve contractile function in CHF patients.
The specific aims are: 1. To test the hypothesis that cardiac energy turnover is decreased in human CHF and that this occurs in proportion to contractile dysfunction and CHF clinical severity. 2. To evaluate the relationship between metabolic reserve and contractile function in patients with and without CHF during changes in contractile performance induced by esmolol and/or dobutamine. 3. To test whether an acute intervention that improves mechano-energetic efficiency in the failing heart improves metabolic reserve and contractile function. 4. To evaluate whether a chronic intervention designed to improve metabolic parameters, oral creatine supplementation, can increase myocardial creatine and PCr contents, flux through myocardial CK, and improve contractile function, symptoms, and exercise tolerance in CHF patients. These studies directly test the importance and magnitude of the role of energy deprivation in human CHF.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL061912-09
Application #
7253288
Study Section
Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Research A Study Section (CVA)
Program Officer
Evans, Frank
Project Start
1999-07-19
Project End
2009-06-30
Budget Start
2007-07-01
Budget End
2009-06-30
Support Year
9
Fiscal Year
2007
Total Cost
$365,376
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
001910777
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21218
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Weiss, Kilian; Bottomley, Paul A; Weiss, Robert G (2015) On the theoretical limits of detecting cyclic changes in cardiac high-energy phosphates and creatine kinase reaction kinetics using in vivo ³¹P MRS. NMR Biomed 28:694-705
Zhang, Yi; Zhou, Jinyuan; Bottomley, Paul A (2015) Minimizing lipid signal bleed in brain (1) H chemical shift imaging by post-acquisition grid shifting. Magn Reson Med 74:320-9
Schär, Michael; Gabr, Refaat E; El-Sharkawy, AbdEl-Monem M et al. (2015) Two repetition time saturation transfer (TwiST) with spill-over correction to measure creatine kinase reaction rates in human hearts. J Cardiovasc Magn Reson 17:70
Soleimanifard, Sahar; Stuber, Matthias; Hays, Allison G et al. (2014) Robust volume-targeted balanced steady-state free-precession coronary magnetic resonance angiography in a breathhold at 3.0 Tesla: a reproducibility study. J Cardiovasc Magn Reson 16:27
Bottomley, Paul A; Panjrath, Gurusher S; Lai, Shenghan et al. (2013) Metabolic rates of ATP transfer through creatine kinase (CK Flux) predict clinical heart failure events and death. Sci Transl Med 5:215re3
Hays, Allison G; Stuber, Matthias; Hirsch, Glenn A et al. (2013) Non-invasive detection of coronary endothelial response to sequential handgrip exercise in coronary artery disease patients and healthy adults. PLoS One 8:e58047

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