Volume 22, Number 2, 91-95, DOI: 10.1007/s10557-008-6083-1

Metabolic (In)Flexibility of the Diabetic Heart

Terje S. Larsen and Ellen Aasum

From the issue entitled "Special Issue" Myocardial Metabolism - Therapeutic Aspects; Proceedings of the 5th International Conference of the Society for Heart and Vascular Metabolism - Maastricht 2007, Guest Editors: Jan F. C. Glatz and William C. Stanley"

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Abstract

Introduction  

Metabolic inflexibility was first described as a failure of skeletal muscle of diabetic subjects to appropriately move between use of lipid in the fasting state and use of carbohydrate in the insulin-stimulated prandial state. Metabolically healthy hearts have a well developed capacity to switch between lipid and carbohydrate fuels, depending on hormone levels and substrate availability in the circulation, but it is assumed that this flexibility is lost in the maladapted diabetic heart.

Objectives  

We show in this short review that chronic treatment with lipid-lowering drugs, as well as acute administration of insulin and glucose, modulate the substrate flux in the diabetic heart. We also show that such interventions have functional implications in terms of improved cardiac efficiency and tolerance to ischemic stress.

Key words  myocardial metabolism - PPAR agonists - insulin - cardiac function

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