[Protective effect of peptide semax the rat heart in acute myocardial infarction].
Golubeva. A V AV; Gavrilova. S A SA; Lipina. T V TV; Shornikova. M V MV; Postnikov. A B AB; Andreeva. L A LA; Chentsov. Iu S IuS; Koshelev. V B VB
Key Findings
- Semax prevented ultrastructural damage to heart muscle cells after acute myocardial infarction in rats
- Semax reduced the rise in plasma nitrate levels associated with the heart attack
- Semax did not improve overall cardiac function or blood pressure in the acute phase
Practical Outcomes
- The study hints that semax could have a protective effect on heart cells during a heart attack, but it doesn’t boost heart performance and has only been shown in rats. For biohackers, it’s not yet a usable protocol for humans and would require more research before considering any self‑experimentation.
Summary
In rats that had a simulated heart attack, giving the peptide semax didn’t change blood pressure or heart pumping ability, but it stopped tiny damage inside heart cells and lowered a blood marker of stress. The effect was seen only at the cellular level and was tested in animals, not people.
Abstract
Semax, a member of ACTH-derived peptides family, has been employed in the treatment of acute ischemic stroke in patients. It decreased neurological deficit and reduced NO hyperproduction in the rat brain, caused by acute cerebral hypoperfusion. We suggested that semax is also able to protect rat heart from ischemic damage in acute myocardial infaction (AMI). AMI was induced by left coronary artery occlusion, myocardial ischemic area averaged 30 % of left ventricle. In 2 hours after coronary occlusion, the AMI group developed 11 % reduced mean arterial blood pressure and 48 % increased diastolic blood pressure in left ventricle in comparison with sham-operated control group. However, infusion of either dobutamine, which directly stimulates myocardial contractility, or sodium nitroprusside and phenylephrine, that change vascular resistance and thus cardiac afterload, did not reveal distinctions in hemodynamic parameters between groups. These data indicate absense or only moderate cardiac dysfunction in rats with AMI and are consistent wih morphometrical and histochemical studies that did not detect any necrotic or apoptotic (TUNEL-test) changes in left ventricular cardiomyocytes in spite of development of distinct ischemic disturbances of mitochondria and nuclear in about 50 % of cardiomyocytes in 2 hours after AMI. Semax (150 microg/kg), given i. p. 15 min and 2 hours after coronary occlusion, caused no effect on cardiac function, but completely prevented ischemia-induced ultrastructural changes of cardiomyocytes. This protective effect was accompanied by the ability of peptide to blunt the increase in plasma concentrations of nitrates, observed in AMI group.
Study Information
pubmed
2006