Chronic high‐dose testosterone treatment: impact on rat cardiac contractile biology

Abstract Androgen therapy provides cardiovascular benefits for hypogonadism. However, myocardial hypertrophy, fibrosis, and infarction have been reported in testosterone or androgenic anabolic steroid abuse. Therefore, better understanding of the factors leading to adverse results of androgen abuse...

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Main Authors: Munthana Wadthaisong, Namthip Witayavanitkul, Tepmanas Bupha‐Intr, Jonggonnee Wattanapermpool, Pieter P. deTombe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-07-01
Series:Physiological Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14192
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spelling doaj-4711bd03363f4d9c897172e80068245d2020-11-25T01:23:30ZengWileyPhysiological Reports2051-817X2019-07-01714n/an/a10.14814/phy2.14192Chronic high‐dose testosterone treatment: impact on rat cardiac contractile biologyMunthana Wadthaisong0Namthip Witayavanitkul1Tepmanas Bupha‐Intr2Jonggonnee Wattanapermpool3Pieter P. deTombe4Department of Physiology, Faculty of Science Mahidol University Bangkok ThailandDepartment of Physiology, Faculty of Science Mahidol University Bangkok ThailandDepartment of Physiology, Faculty of Science Mahidol University Bangkok ThailandDepartment of Physiology, Faculty of Science Mahidol University Bangkok ThailandDepartment of Cell and Molecular Physiology Loyola University Chicago Health Sciences Division Maywood IllinoisAbstract Androgen therapy provides cardiovascular benefits for hypogonadism. However, myocardial hypertrophy, fibrosis, and infarction have been reported in testosterone or androgenic anabolic steroid abuse. Therefore, better understanding of the factors leading to adverse results of androgen abuse is needed. The aim of the present study was to examine the impact of high dose of androgen treatment on cardiac biology, and whether exposure duration modulates this response. Male rats were treated with 10 mg/kg testosterone, three times a week, for either 4 or 12 weeks; vehicle injections served as controls. Four weeks of testosterone treatment induced an increase in ventricular wall thickness, indicative of concentric hypertrophy, as well as increased ejection fraction; in contrast, both parameters were blunted following 12 weeks of high‐dose testosterone treatment. Cardiac myocyte contractile parameters were assessed in isolated electrically stimulated myocytes (sarcomere and intracellular calcium dynamics), and in chemically permeabilized isolated myocardium (myofilament force development and tension‐cost). High‐dose testosterone treatment for 4 weeks was associated with increased myocyte contractile parameters, while 12 weeks treatment induced significant depression of these parameters, mirroring the cardiac pump function results. In conclusion, chronic administration of high‐dose testosterone initially induces increased cardiac function. However, this initial beneficial impact is followed by significant depression of cardiac pump function, myocyte contractility, and cardiac myofilament function. Our results indicate that chronic high‐testosterone usage is of limited use and may, instead, induce significant cardiac dysfunction.https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14192testosteroneabusesarcomerecardiomyocytecontractilitymyofilament
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Munthana Wadthaisong
Namthip Witayavanitkul
Tepmanas Bupha‐Intr
Jonggonnee Wattanapermpool
Pieter P. deTombe
spellingShingle Munthana Wadthaisong
Namthip Witayavanitkul
Tepmanas Bupha‐Intr
Jonggonnee Wattanapermpool
Pieter P. deTombe
Chronic high‐dose testosterone treatment: impact on rat cardiac contractile biology
Physiological Reports
testosterone
abuse
sarcomere
cardiomyocyte
contractility
myofilament
author_facet Munthana Wadthaisong
Namthip Witayavanitkul
Tepmanas Bupha‐Intr
Jonggonnee Wattanapermpool
Pieter P. deTombe
author_sort Munthana Wadthaisong
title Chronic high‐dose testosterone treatment: impact on rat cardiac contractile biology
title_short Chronic high‐dose testosterone treatment: impact on rat cardiac contractile biology
title_full Chronic high‐dose testosterone treatment: impact on rat cardiac contractile biology
title_fullStr Chronic high‐dose testosterone treatment: impact on rat cardiac contractile biology
title_full_unstemmed Chronic high‐dose testosterone treatment: impact on rat cardiac contractile biology
title_sort chronic high‐dose testosterone treatment: impact on rat cardiac contractile biology
publisher Wiley
series Physiological Reports
issn 2051-817X
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract Androgen therapy provides cardiovascular benefits for hypogonadism. However, myocardial hypertrophy, fibrosis, and infarction have been reported in testosterone or androgenic anabolic steroid abuse. Therefore, better understanding of the factors leading to adverse results of androgen abuse is needed. The aim of the present study was to examine the impact of high dose of androgen treatment on cardiac biology, and whether exposure duration modulates this response. Male rats were treated with 10 mg/kg testosterone, three times a week, for either 4 or 12 weeks; vehicle injections served as controls. Four weeks of testosterone treatment induced an increase in ventricular wall thickness, indicative of concentric hypertrophy, as well as increased ejection fraction; in contrast, both parameters were blunted following 12 weeks of high‐dose testosterone treatment. Cardiac myocyte contractile parameters were assessed in isolated electrically stimulated myocytes (sarcomere and intracellular calcium dynamics), and in chemically permeabilized isolated myocardium (myofilament force development and tension‐cost). High‐dose testosterone treatment for 4 weeks was associated with increased myocyte contractile parameters, while 12 weeks treatment induced significant depression of these parameters, mirroring the cardiac pump function results. In conclusion, chronic administration of high‐dose testosterone initially induces increased cardiac function. However, this initial beneficial impact is followed by significant depression of cardiac pump function, myocyte contractility, and cardiac myofilament function. Our results indicate that chronic high‐testosterone usage is of limited use and may, instead, induce significant cardiac dysfunction.
topic testosterone
abuse
sarcomere
cardiomyocyte
contractility
myofilament
url https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14192
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