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4 days ago
4 days ago
The literature shows that the incidence of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) increases significantly in postmenopausal women, but how can researchers study the underlying mechanisms? In our latest episode, Dr. Jonathan Kirk (Loyola University Chicago) interviews lead author Dr. Mei Methawasin (University of Missouri, Columbia) and expert Dr. Glen Pyle (University of Guelph) about the recent study by Methawasin and co-authors investigating sex differences, menopause and HFpEF. The authors created an animal model that resembles HFpEF in women undergoing natural menopause by using 4-vinylcyclohexene dioxide (VCD) to induce “ovary-intact” menopause, combined with the 2hit regimen (HFpEF inducing regimen) to model postmenopausal HFpEF. Combining echocardiography, pressure-volume and single-cell analyses, the authors found that VCD mice, compared to ovariectomized mice and premenopausal mice, have higher testosterone levels compared to other models. By developing this robust phenotype animal model, the authors open new avenues for investigating therapeutic targets in other hormones beyond estrogen alone. Ready to explore the estrobolome, the importance of animal models of human disease, and the complex family of hormones comprising estrogen? Listen now.
Mei Methawasin, Joshua Strom, Vito A. Marino, Jochen Gohlke, Julia Muldoon, Shelby R. Herrick, Robbert van der Piji, John P. Konhilas, Henk Granzier An ovary-intact postmenopausal HFpEF mouse model; menopause is more than just estrogen deficiency Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, published March 10, 2025. DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00575.2024
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