Influence of dietary rapeseed oil and erucic acid upon myocardial performance and hemodynamics in rats.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine the effects of rapeseed oil and erucic acid on myocardial performance, contractility, and hemodynamics in rats compared to a control diet of sunflowerseed oil.
Results Summary
Rapeseed oil caused focal myocardial fibrotic lesions but did not affect intrinsic contractility in vitro or in vivo, though it reduced contractile reserve capacity after inotropic intervention. Erucic acid did not cause fibrotic lesions but appeared to interfere with the peripheral vascular system, reducing vasoconstrictor response to norepinephrine.
Population
Rats
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
24-26 weeks
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
rapeseed oil | no change | intrinsic myocardial contractility in vitro and in vivo | Rats | - | no changes were found | #1 |
rapeseed oil | decrease | contractile reserve capacity | rapeseed oil fed animals | - | showed less contractile reserve capacity | #2 |
erucic acid | no change | epicardiac fibrotic lesions | erucic acid-treated animals | - | showing no epicardiac fibrotic lesions | #3 |
erucic acid | neutral | contractile system of the peripheral vascular system | - | - | is able to interfere with | #4 |
rapeseed oil | decrease | vasoconstrictor response toward norepinephrine | rapeseed oil-treated group | - | profoundly reduced | #5 |
erucic acid | decrease | vasoconstrictor response toward norepinephrine | erucic acid-treated group | - | profoundly reduced | #6 |
isoproterenol | decrease | myocardial contractility | all three oil fed groups | - | reduced myocardial contractility | #7 |
rapeseed oil | no change | electrocardiographic changes | - | - | neither ... led to electrocardiographic changes | #8 |
erucic acid | no change | electrocardiographic changes | - | - | neither ... led to electrocardiographic changes | #9 |
fat rich diet | decrease | myocardial function | - | - | might result in reduced myocardial function | #10 |
Rats fed rapeseed oil, pure erucic acid, or a control diet of sunflowerseed oil during 24-26 weeks were studied for effects upon mechanical behavior of the isolated perfused heart and upon myocardial performance and hemodynamics in intact animals both under basal and stimulated conditions. In spite of focal myocardial fibrotic lesions due to rapeseed oil, no changes were found with respect to the intrinsic myocardial contractility in vitro and and in vivo. After inotropic intervention, only the rapeseed oil fed animals showed less contractile reserve capacity. The absence of this effect in the erucic acid-treated animals is in agreement with the histological studies showing no epicardiac fibrotic lesions in these animals. It appears that erucic acid is able to interfere with the contractile system of the peripheral vascular system. Both in the rapeseed oil-treated group and the erucic acid-treated group, the vasoconstrictor response toward norepinephrine was profoundly reduced. In all three oil fed groups, isoproterenol reduced myocardial contractility which has been attributed to a lowered perfusion pressure in the coronary blood supply of the myocardium with simultaneous increased energy demand. Neither rapeseed oil nor erucic acid feeding led to electrocardiographic changes in comparison with the control sunflowerseed oil group. It is concluded that rapeseed oil and not erucic acid is responsible for loss of contractile reserve capacity without changes in the myocardial conductance system and further, that erucic acid might interfere with the peripheral vascular system. Finally, it appears that a fat rich diet might result in reduced myocardial function during a state of energy demand coupled with a blood pressure decrease.