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1.
Front Pharmacol ; 12: 695486, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34267663

ABSTRACT

Cardiovascular disease is one of the leading causes of mortality in diabetes. High fructose consumption has been linked with the development of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Serum and cardiac tissue fructose levels are elevated in diabetic patients, and cardiac production of fructose via the intracellular polyol pathway is upregulated. The question of whether direct myocardial fructose exposure and upregulated fructose metabolism have potential to induce cardiac fructose toxicity in metabolic stress settings arises. Unlike tightly-regulated glucose metabolism, fructose bypasses the rate-limiting glycolytic enzyme, phosphofructokinase, and proceeds through glycolysis in an unregulated manner. In vivo rodent studies have shown that high dietary fructose induces cardiac metabolic stress and functional disturbance. In vitro, studies have demonstrated that cardiomyocytes cultured in high fructose exhibit lipid accumulation, inflammation, hypertrophy and low viability. Intracellular fructose mediates post-translational modification of proteins, and this activity provides an important mechanistic pathway for fructose-related cardiomyocyte signaling and functional effect. Additionally, fructose has been shown to provide a fuel source for the stressed myocardium. Elucidating the mechanisms of fructose toxicity in the heart may have important implications for understanding cardiac pathology in metabolic stress settings.

2.
Biomech Model Mechanobiol ; 3(1): 17-32, 2004 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15300454

ABSTRACT

Finite element simulations of fluid-solid interactions were used to investigate inter-individual variations in flow dynamics and wall mechanics at the carotid artery bifurcation, and its effects on atherogenesis, in three healthy humans (normal volunteers: NV1, NV2, NV4). Subject-specific calculations were based on MR images of structural anatomy and ultrasound measurements of flow at domain boundaries. For all subjects, the largest contiguous region of low wall shear stress (WSS) occurred at the carotid bulb, WSS was high (6-10 Pa) at the apex, and a small localized region of WSS > 10 Pa occurred close to the inner wall of the external carotid artery (ECA). NV2 and NV4 had a "spot" of low WSS distal to the bifurcation at the inner wall of the ECA. Low WSS patches in the common carotid artery (CCA) were contiguous with the carotid bulb low WSS region in NV1 and NV2, but not in NV4. In all three subjects, areas of high oscillatory shear index (OSI) were confined to regions of low WSS. Only NV4 exhibited high levels of OSI on the external adjoining wall of the ECA and CCA. For all subjects, the maximum wall shear stress temporal gradient (WSSTG) was highest at the flow divider (reaching 1,000 Pa/s), exceeding 300 Pa/s at the walls connecting the ECA and CCA, but remaining below 250 Pa/s outside of the ECA. In all subjects, (maximum principle) cyclic strain (CS) was greatest at the apex (NV1: 14%; NV2: 11%; NV4: 6%), and a second high CS region occurred at the ECA-CCA adjoining wall (NV1: 11%, NV2: 9%, NV4: 5%). Wall deformability was included in one simulation (NV2) to verify that it had little influence on the parameters studied. Location and magnitude of low WSS were similar, except for the apex (differences of up to 25%). Wall distensibility also influenced OSI, doubling it in most of the CCA, separating the single high OSI region of the carotid bulb into two smaller regions, and shrinking the ECA internal and external walls' high OSI regions. These observations provide further evidence that significant intra-subject variability exists in those factors thought to impact atherosclerosis.


Subject(s)
Arteriosclerosis/physiopathology , Carotid Arteries/physiology , Hemodynamics , Models, Cardiovascular , Adult , Arteriosclerosis/blood , Blood Flow Velocity , Computer Simulation , Finite Element Analysis , Hemorheology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Models, Anatomic , Shear Strength , Stress, Mechanical
3.
Opt Lett ; 26(17): 1356-8, 2001 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18049607

ABSTRACT

The generation of a spatially single-mode white-light supercontinuum has been observed in a photonic crystal fiber pumped with 60-ps pulses of subkilowatt peak power. The spectral broadening is identified as being due to the combined action of stimulated Raman scattering and parametric four-wave-mixing generation, with a negligible contribution from the self-phase modulation of the pump pulses. The experimental results are in good agreement with detailed numerical simulations. These findings demonstrate that ultrafast femtosecond pulses are not needed for efficient supercontinuum generation in photonic crystal fibers.

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