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Original Article

Changes in Creatine Kinase Expression Induced by Exercise in Borderline Hypertensive Rat Hearts

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Pages 577-593 | Received 07 Sep 1993, Accepted 01 Feb 1994, Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Hypertrophy in hypertensive hearts is associated with increased risk of cardiac morbidity and mortality that is not characteristic of exercised hearts. This study was done to determine whether exercise training of normotensive and borderline hypertensive rats induces the increased myocardial expression of BB and MB isoforms of creatine kinase (CK) that characterizes hypertensive hypertrophy. Spontaneously hypertensive (SHR), borderline hypertensive (BHR), and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats were subjected to either an 8% sodium chloride diet or swim training to produce myocardial hypertrophy. Both exercise and a high salt diet induced an increase in the combined expression of CK-MB and CK-BB in SHR after 2 months. However, since swimming also exacerbated hypertension in SHR, exercise induced effects on CK were not distinguishable from those of hypertension. In WKY, neither exercise nor a high salt diet induced significant changes in CK isozyme expression. In BHR fed a high sodium chloride diet, significant increases in mean arterial pressure and left ventricular weight to body weight were not associated with changes in CK expression. In contrast, following 10 months of swim training BHR exhibited mild hypertrophy, decreased resting heart rates, and an increase in the combined expression of CK-MB and CK-BB. Therefore, exercise associated with a cardiac training effect in BHR induced changes in CK isozyme expression similar to those in hypertensive hearts.

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