Research Grant
[Cite as https://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/232313]Researchers: Prof Clive May (Principal investigator)
Brief description Heart failure is a condition in which the heart muscle becomes weak and is unable to pump sufficient blood around the body to provide adequate perfusion of the organs. This results in breathlessness, lethargy, fatigue, mental confusion and eventually death. At present the life expectancy of patients with heart failure is poor, with a 5 year survival of 25% in men and 38% in women. It is the only form of heart disease that is increasing, the reason being that thousands of patients who have survived heart attacks or had coronary bypass operations go on to develop heart failure. In heart failure there is a very large increase in the activity of the nerves that stimulate cardiac rate and contractility, the cardiac sympathetic nerves. This increase in activity is detrimental, higher levels of activity predict greater morbidity and a reduced life span. The mechanisms causing the increase in cardiac sympathetic nerve activity are unknown, but greater understanding is essential if new and improved treatments are to be developed for patients with heart failure. Only two groups in the world measure cardiac nerve activity in conscious animals, neither is studying heart failure. We therefore have a unique opportunity to investigate the factors that control the activity of the cardiac nerves in the healthy state and to establish the causes of the increase in activity in heart failure. In particular, we will investigate how reflex control mechanisms, circulating hormones that are increased in heart failure and specific mechanisms in the brain act to control cardiac nerve activity in the normal state and what changes in these mechanisms lead to the preferential increase in cardiac nerve activity in heart failure. These findings will provide a detailed understanding of the mechanisms controlling cardiac nerve activity in the normal healthy state and increased knowledge of the factors that lead to the preferential activation of the cardiac nerves in heart failure.
Funding Amount $AUD 531,125.00
Funding Scheme NHMRC Project Grants
Notes Standard Project Grant
- nhmrc : 232313
- PURL : https://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/232313