Hyperpolarized <sup>13</sup>C and <sup>31</sup>P MRS detects differences in cardiac energetics, metabolism, and function in obesity, and responses following treatment.
NMR Biomed · 2024
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study using rats fed a high-fat diet, obesity led to changes in heart energy use, metabolism, and function, including reduced heart energy levels and impaired relaxation during the heartbeat. Two treatments—caloric restriction and the GLP-1 drug liraglutide—both improved these heart-related issues. The research used advanced imaging techniques to measure these changes and their reversal.
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| Journal | NMR Biomed, 2024 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 9 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.61 |
| NIH percentile | 67 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Obesity, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction |
Abstract
Obesity is associated with important changes in cardiac energetics and function, and an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Multi-nuclear MRS and MRI techniques have the potential to provide a comprehensive non-invasive assessment of cardiac metabolic perturbation in obesity. A rat model of obesity was created by high-fat diet feeding. This model was characterized using in vivo hyperpolarized [1-C]pyruvate and [2-C]pyruvate MRS, echocardiography and perfused heart P MRS. Two groups of obese rats were subsequently treated with either caloric restriction or the glucagon-like peptide-1 analogue/agonist liraglutide, prior to reassessment. The model recapitulated cardiovascular consequences of human obesity, including mild left ventricular hypertrophy, and diastolic, but not systolic, dysfunction. Hyperpolarized C and P MRS demonstrated that obesity was associated with reduced myocardial pyruvate dehydrogenase flux, altered cardiac tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle metabolism, and impaired myocardial energetic status (lower phosphocreatine to adenosine triphosphate ratio and impaired cardiac ΔG). Both caloric restriction and liraglutide treatment were associated with normalization of metabolic changes, alongside improvement in cardiac diastolic function. In this model of obesity, hyperpolarized C and P MRS demonstrated abnormalities in cardiac metabolism at multiple levels, including myocardial substrate selection, TCA cycle, and high-energy phosphorus metabolism. Metabolic changes were linked with impairment of diastolic function and were reversed in concert following either caloric restriction or liraglutide treatment. With hyperpolarized C and P techniques now available for human use, the findings support a role for multi-nuclear MRS in the development of new therapies for obesity.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38994722 ↗