Dietary lipid modulation of ventricular fibrillation threshold in the marmoset monkey
- PMID: 1595535
- DOI: 10.1016/0002-8703(92)90809-a
Dietary lipid modulation of ventricular fibrillation threshold in the marmoset monkey
Abstract
Programmed electrical stimulation was used to examine the ability of long-term dietary lipid modulation to influence myocardial vulnerability to the induction of ventricular fibrillation in adult marmoset monkeys (Callithrix jacchus). Marmosets fed diets supplemented (to a total of 28.5% of the energy as fat) with polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA)-rich tuna fish oil or sunflower seed oil had significantly elevated mean ventricular fibrillation threshold compared with those fed a saturated animal fat supplemented diet or a reference diet not supplemented with fat (11.2% of the energy as fat). Fibrillation threshold was reduced during acute myocardial ischemia induced by coronary artery occlusion but still remained higher in the PUFA-fed animals than either the control or the ischemic threshold in reference or saturated fat supplemented animals. Dietary tuna fish oil was associated with a low incidence of sustained fibrillation episodes and no fatalities. These results indicate that myocardial substrate vulnerability to arrhythmic stimuli is increased during ischemia in a nonhuman primate model but dietary PUFA can reduce vulnerability under both normal and ischemic conditions. Reduced dietary fat intake alone was without effect.
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