The purpose of this study is to determine, with Positron Emission Tomography (PET), the role of nitric oxide in the age-associated effect on fatty acid and glucose delivery on myocardial substrate metabolism.
Aging is associated with an increased incidence and severity of various cardiovascular disorders. Previously, our laboratory has demonstrated an age-related shift in the substrates used by the heart for metabolism from primarily fatty acids to primarily glucose. Furthermore, other institutions have demonstrated that a similar shift can be induced, in animal models, with specific nitric oxide synthase inhibitors, such as L-NAME (N-Nitro-L-Arginine Methyl Ester). Our hypothesis is that a reduction in nitric oxide (NO) synthesis is responsible for the age-related shift in heart function. Accordingly, we aim to demonstrate, in young patients, an acute, transient shift in substrate use from fatty acids to glucose with L-NMMA (citrate) in association with depressed heart function. Also, we aim to demonstrate in the elderly an acute, transient shift in substrate use from glucose to fatty acids with L-arginine, in association with improved cardiac function. These results will demonstrate a portion of the mechanism for the age-related shift in substrate utilization. Each participant will undergo a screening visit which will include a Glucose Tolerance Test, an echocardiogram in conjunction with a treadmill stress test to exclude cardiac disease, and baseline blood work. Then each patient will have 3 PET study days, each lasting about 5-6 hours. During this time, the patient will have two IVs (one in each arm). They will have 4 injections of different radioactive isotopes (015 Water, C11 Acetate, C11 Glucose, and C11 Palmitate). After each injection, about 8-10 blood samples will be drawn over the course of about ½ to 1 hour of time. In between each injection, there will be about an hour break for the patient to rest and move around. During one of the breaks, the patient will have another echocardiogram. On the day 2 and 3 PET, the patient will have a 30-60 minute infusion of L-NAME. Then the PET study will commence. After the study is over the participant will have a 10-minute infusion of L-arginine to reverse the effects of L-NAME.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
54
nitric oxide synthase inhibitor 4mg/kg infusion over 30-60 minutes prior to PET imaging
aids in nitric oxide production
alpha agonist; 10 μg/kg/min infusion during PET study
Washington University School of Medicine
St Louis, Missouri, United States
Effect of NO Inhibition on Myocardial Substrate Metabolism in Humans
Determine in young healthy volunteers the extent to which acute inhibition of nitric oxide production will effect a shift in myocardial substrate utilization characterized as a decline in myocardial fatty acid oxidation, and perhaps myocardial fatty acid utilization, and increase in myocardial glucose uptake, and whether these changes are associated with a decline in LV function.
Time frame: 1-3 months
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