Animal models of heart failure: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association

SR Houser, KB Margulies, AM Murphy… - Circulation …, 2012 - Am Heart Assoc
SR Houser, KB Margulies, AM Murphy, FG Spinale, GS Francis, SD Prabhu, HA Rockman
Circulation research, 2012Am Heart Assoc
Heart failure (HF) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States. Despite
a number of important therapeutic advances for the treatment of symptomatic HF, 1 the
prevalence, mortality, and cost associated with HF continue to grow in the United States and
other developed countries. Given the aging of our population and the prevalence of
diseases such as diabetes mellitus and hypertension that predispose patients to this
syndrome, it is possible that HF prevalence will increase in the next decade. Current …
Heart failure (HF) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States. Despite a number of important therapeutic advances for the treatment of symptomatic HF, 1 the prevalence, mortality, and cost associated with HF continue to grow in the United States and other developed countries. Given the aging of our population and the prevalence of diseases such as diabetes mellitus and hypertension that predispose patients to this syndrome, it is possible that HF prevalence will increase in the next decade. Current treatments primarily slow the progression of this syndrome, and there is a need to develop novel preventative and reparative therapies. Development of these novel HF therapies requires testing of the putative therapeutic strategies in appropriate HF animal models. The purposes of this scientific statement are to define the distinctive clinical features of the major causes of HF in humans and to recommend those distinctive pathological features of HF in humans that should be present in an animal model being used to identify fundamental causes of HF or to test preventative or reparative therapies that could reduce HF morbidity and mortality.
HF is a clinical syndrome with primary symptoms including dyspnea, fatigue, exercise intolerance, and retention of fluid in the lungs and peripheral tissues. The causes of HF are myriad, but the common fundamental defect is a decreased ability of the heart to provide sufficient cardiac output to support the normal functions of the tissues because of impaired filling and/or ejection of blood.
Am Heart Assoc