Effects of Electronic vs. Tobacco Cigarettes on Cardiovascular Health in Male and Female Mice

IF 5.3 2区 医学 Q1 PHYSIOLOGY Physiology Pub Date : 2024-05-01 DOI:10.1152/physiol.2024.39.s1.1235
Candice J. Lao, Maria C. Jordan, Theodore C. Friedman, Yin Tintut, Xuesi M. Shao, Kenneth P. Roos
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Abstract

Objective: Smoking electronic cigarettes (E-cig) has been promoted as a safer alternative to conventional tobacco cigarettes (CIG) and thus become popular, especially among younger generations. However, one mode of smoking nicotine containing products vs. another on the effects on health and gender are largely unknown. Hypothesis: Both E-cig and CIG have adverse effects on body weight as well as cardiovascular health. Methods: To closely mimic the Western population, we investigated the effects of two insults (diet and/or nicotine exposure) in mice. Nine-week old male and female Apoe−/− mice (C57BL/6 background) were placed on normal chow or high-fat diet (Western diet, WD) and/or exposed to air, E-cig, or CIG for 12 weeks. The E-cig and Cig exposures used a chronic-intermittent puff protocol for 10 hours a day, seven days a week during their active (dark) circadian cycle. Changes in body weight, cardiac structure, function, and atherosclerotic lesions were assessed and compared. Results: In males, body weight was significantly reduced by CIG exposure with both the normal diet or WD, while in females, only on WD. This suggests that CIG exposure had gender-dependent effects on the body weight. E-cig exposure, however, did not affect the body weight in both males and females on either diet compared with the controls. Echocardiographic analysis showed that left ventricular mass was increased while ejection fraction was reduced by both e-cigarette and CIG-exposure. These data suggest that both modes of nicotine delivery had gender-independent adverse effects on cardiac structure and function. En face analysis of the aorta in both genders showed that two insults (CIG and WD) are necessary to induce significantly greater lesions. There were no significant increases in lesions with E-Cigs. This suggests that CIG exposure had insult-dependent but gender-independent effects on atherosclerotic lesion development. Summary: These findings suggest that both electronic cigarettes and conventional tobacco cigarettes impose adverse effects on the body weight and cardiovascular health in modes of nicotine- and gender-dependent manners. Funding: Department of Defense CDMRP Grant PR 190942 (TCF) and DODCDMRP Grant PR190942-P1 (KPR). This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
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电子烟与烟草烟对雌雄小鼠心血管健康的影响
目的:吸电子烟(E-cig)被宣传为比传统烟草香烟(CIG)更安全的替代品,因此很受欢迎,尤其是在年轻一代中。然而,吸食含尼古丁产品的一种模式与另一种模式对健康和性别的影响在很大程度上是未知的。假设电子烟和传统卷烟(CIG)都会对体重和心血管健康产生不利影响。研究方法为了接近西方人群,我们在小鼠身上调查了两种刺激(饮食和/或尼古丁暴露)的影响。将九周大的雌雄载脂蛋白/-小鼠(C57BL/6 背景)置于正常饲料或高脂肪饮食(西方饮食,WD)和/或暴露于空气、电子烟或 CIG 中 12 周。E-cig和CIG暴露采用的是慢性间歇性抽吸方案,在小鼠活跃(黑暗)的昼夜节律周期内,每周7天,每天10小时。对体重、心脏结构、功能和动脉粥样硬化病变的变化进行了评估和比较。结果显示男性在正常饮食或 WD 下接触 CIG 会显著降低体重,而女性仅在 WD 下接触 CIG 会显著降低体重。这表明接触 CIG 对体重的影响与性别有关。然而,与对照组相比,接触电子烟不会影响男性和女性的体重。超声心动图分析表明,暴露于电子烟和 CIG 会增加左心室质量,同时降低射血分数。这些数据表明,这两种尼古丁给药模式对心脏结构和功能的不良影响与性别无关。对两种性别的主动脉进行的面分析表明,必须受到两种刺激(CIG 和 WD)才能引起明显的更大病变。电子烟的病变没有明显增加。这表明,接触 CIG 对动脉粥样硬化病变的发展具有依赖性影响,但与性别无关。总结:这些研究结果表明,电子香烟和传统烟草香烟都会对体重和心血管健康产生不利影响,其影响模式与尼古丁和性别有关。资助:国防部 CDMRP 资助 PR 190942(TCF)和 DODCDMRP 资助 PR190942-P1(KPR)。本文是在 2024 年美国生理学峰会上发表的摘要全文,仅提供 HTML 格式。本摘要没有附加版本或附加内容。生理学》未参与同行评审过程。
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来源期刊
Physiology
Physiology 医学-生理学
CiteScore
14.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Physiology journal features meticulously crafted review articles penned by esteemed leaders in their respective fields. These articles undergo rigorous peer review and showcase the forefront of cutting-edge advances across various domains of physiology. Our Editorial Board, comprised of distinguished leaders in the broad spectrum of physiology, convenes annually to deliberate and recommend pioneering topics for review articles, as well as select the most suitable scientists to author these articles. Join us in exploring the forefront of physiological research and innovation.
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