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1 n caused by transaortic constriction-induced pressure overload.
2 of TNC in cardiac hypertrophy in response to pressure overload.
3 thological cardiac remodeling in response to pressure overload.
4 nst excessive remodeling in response to mild pressure overload.
5 o identify the diffuse local inflammation in pressure overload.
6 inflammatory leukocyte infiltration early in pressure overload.
7 ge subset into the myocardium in response to pressure overload.
8 4 after adrenergic stimulation or myocardial pressure overload.
9 esponse for pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase to pressure overload.
10 ult mouse hearts expressing ssTnI to chronic pressure overload.
11 tch and from sera of mice undergoing cardiac pressure overload.
12 of MeCP2 target genes remained stable during pressure overload.
13 nversation regulates the heart's response to pressure overload.
14 ing in pathological LV remodelling following pressure overload.
15 , genetically altered mice were subjected to pressure overload.
16 icular HF was induced by combined volume and pressure overload.
17 ve remodeling and arrhythmias in response to pressure overload.
18 of ST2 exacerbated cardiac hypertrophy with pressure overload.
19 Both cardiac phenotypes were aggravated on pressure overload.
20 pertrophy in the hearts of mice subjected to pressure overload.
21 y and fibrosis in a disease model of cardiac pressure overload.
22 s develop an aggravated phenotype induced by pressure overload.
23 uring HF induced by myocardial infarction or pressure overload.
24 /-) gain-of-function mutation in response to pressure overload.
25 maladaptive autophagy in a model of cardiac pressure overload.
26 (HF) forms of cardiac hypertrophy because of pressure overload.
27 ided significantly protective benefits after pressure overload.
28 ling occurs in a model of volume rather than pressure overload.
29 blast lineages also remained unchanged after pressure overload.
30 ead to improved cardiac remodeling following pressure overload.
31 for cardiac phenotyping in a mouse model of pressure overload.
32 ed redox stress in response to infarction or pressure overload.
33 hypertrophy in response to phenylephrine and pressure overload.
34 ansaortic constriction as a model of cardiac pressure overload.
35 rtrophy and improved systolic function after pressure overload.
36 ed by VCP under the cardiac stress caused by pressure overload.
37 on on the translational level in response to pressure overload.
38 al cardiac remodeling in response to chronic pressure overload.
39 USP20 phosphorylation in cardiac response to pressure overload.
40 of FoxO1-bound, pol II-regulated genes after pressure overload.
41 for PKG1-mediated cardiac protection against pressure overload.
42 tial fibrosis in mice subjected to sustained pressure overload.
43 alpha or ATF6beta on the cardiac response to pressure overload.
44 Mice were subjected to chronic pressure overload.
45 nsition to heart failure (HF) in response to pressure overload.
46 line HFpEF model induced by slow-progressive pressure overload.
47 es of isoprenaline stress under baseline and pressure-overload.
48 itochondrial respiration despite elevated RV pressure-overload.
49 ysfunction, partially independent of chronic pressure-overload.
50 Myocardial YKL-40 increased in experimental pressure overload (6-fold in decompensated versus sham m
51 inhibition of NF-kappaB at the time of acute pressure overload accelerates the progression of left ve
52 al gene program and disrupts the response to pressure overload, accompanied by prominent effects on m
53 tion of CTGF levels in the heart with aging, pressure overload, agonist infusion, or TGF-beta overexp
54 ed cardiac hypertrophy, and following severe pressure overload all Erbin(-/-) mice died from heart fa
57 n important regulator of NCX1 in response to pressure overload and aimed to identify molecular mechan
60 TORC1 is necessary for cardiac adaptation to pressure overload and development of compensatory hypert
62 her impaired cardiac function in response to pressure overload and exacerbated fibrosis by enhancing
63 ed in myocardial phospholipids after chronic pressure overload and explored plausible links between t
64 d fatty acid redistribution in rat models of pressure overload and hypertensive heart disease and sig
66 sis in a clinically relevant animal model of pressure overload and is sensitive to pharmacological re
67 ut mice, Wnt-signaling-modulated hearts, and pressure overload and myocardial ischemia models were ap
68 rdiac function and mortality after long-term pressure overload and prevented disease progression in c
69 OA) results in chronic left ventricular (LV) pressure overload and subsequently leads to LV diastolic
72 pathological and physiological responses to pressure overload are incompletely understood and genera
73 the remodeling responses of the RV and LV to pressure overload are largely similar, there are several
76 ning in 57% of FGR, which supports increased pressure overload as a mechanism for cardiovascular prog
79 wo major angiogenic stimuli occurring during pressure overload bridging both hypertrophic and hypoxia
81 ic responses to phenylephrine and to chronic pressure overload, but it affected neither antiapoptotic
82 ontrol, influences the metabolic response to pressure overload by direct regulation of the catalytic
85 elief of the right ventricular volume and/or pressure overload by TPVR will have a beneficial effect
88 earts subjected to standardized pathological pressure overload by transverse aortic constriction (TAC
89 ontrol mice and in mice subjected to chronic pressure-overload by transverse aorta constriction (TAC)
91 ure after myocardial infarction or long-term pressure overload, by preventing cardiac cell death and
92 Pathological conditions such as ischemia or pressure overload can induce a release of extracellular
94 tect against hypertrophy or dysfunction from pressure overload, combined deletion was protective, sup
96 V1 is downregulated in the LA during cardiac pressure overload, contributing to both electrical and s
97 a heterogeneous population of fibroblasts on pressure overload could suggest that common signaling me
98 ults We used a mouse model of left ventricle pressure overload coupled to in vitro studies in primary
101 ase-specific, because angiotensin II-induced pressure overload does not trigger significant EPDC fibr
103 bited accelerated systolic dysfunction after pressure overload, evidenced by an early 40% reduction i
106 ial triglyceride (TG) turnover is reduced in pressure-overloaded, failing hearts, limiting the availa
107 labels fibroblasts, we found that following pressure overload, fibroblasts were not derived from hem
110 tor attenuated early systolic dysfunction in pressure-overloaded FS3KO mice, suggesting that the prot
112 ur lab has shown that, following ventricular pressure overload, GRK5, a primary cardiac GRK, facilita
115 ischemia due to peripheral arterial disease, pressure-overload heart failure, wound healing, and chro
119 LUM attenuates collagen cross-linking in the pressure-overloaded heart, leading to increased mortalit
122 In a model of aortic banding-induced chronic pressure overload, heart function was similarly depresse
124 Estrogen and sildenafil had no impact on pressure-overloaded hearts from animals expressing dysfu
129 blasts, reduces the hypertrophic response to pressure overload; however, knocking out Pmca4 specifica
132 creasing PGC-1alpha levels in the context of pressure overload hypertrophy (POH) would preserve mitoc
133 al Ca(2+) handling and PDE4B is decreased in pressure overload hypertrophy, suggesting that increasin
138 els, a major factor driving progression from pressure-overload hypertrophy (POH) to HFpEF is the acti
144 g compensatory left ventricular hypertrophy, pressure overload in cardiomyocyte NF-kappaB-deficient m
145 t 1) signaling axis in the LA during cardiac pressure overload in humans and mouse models and explore
146 ficantly decreased cardiac hypertrophy after pressure overload in mice at 2, 10, and 16 weeks of stim
149 tor 2 (BMPR2) gene on right ventricular (RV) pressure overload in patients with pulmonary arterial hy
150 ST protein levels significantly decreased on pressure overload in wild-type mice, paralleling a decre
152 taline + shunt-induced PAH, and rats with RV pressure overload induced by pulmonary artery banding we
153 earts were characterized under conditions of pressure overload induced by transverse aortic constrict
155 catecholamine infusion and a 2-week chronic pressure overload induced by transverse aortic constrict
156 for ATF6alpha and ATF6beta in regulating the pressure overload induced cardiac hypertrophic response
158 ur in vivo studies further demonstrated that pressure overload induced decreases in peroxisome prolif
160 erimental model of cardiac fibrosis, cardiac pressure overload induced NETosis and significant platel
162 yofibroblasts using a mouse model of cardiac pressure overload, induced through transverse aortic con
163 nd Nox2-deficient hearts were protected from pressure overload-induced adverse myocardial and intrace
168 shown that interleukin-10 (IL10) suppresses pressure overload-induced cardiac fibrosis; however, the
169 riction (TAC) is a well-established model of pressure overload-induced cardiac hypertrophy and failur
170 CaV1.2 calcium channels has been reported in pressure overload-induced cardiac hypertrophy and heart
171 t different stages during the progression of pressure overload-induced cardiac hypertrophy in a mouse
172 enylephrine-stimulated cardiomyocytes and in pressure overload-induced cardiac hypertrophy in vivo.
173 verse aortic constriction (TAC), a model for pressure overload-induced cardiac hypertrophy, and follo
174 specific overexpression of Gfat1 exacerbates pressure overload-induced cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis,
182 r Smad3, but not Smad2, markedly reduced the pressure overload-induced fibrotic response as well as f
183 ated that deletion of TRPC6 had no impact on pressure overload-induced heart failure despite inhibiti
189 se proteins, we used an established model of pressure overload-induced heart muscle hypertrophy cause
190 s that occur during the early development of pressure overload-induced HF involve both transcriptiona
193 rdiac-specific deletion of Lin28a attenuated pressure overload-induced hypertrophic growth, cardiac d
194 that IF1 is upregulated in mouse hearts with pressure overload-induced hypertrophy and in human heart
195 tive cardiac fibrosis and dysfunction during pressure overload-induced hypertrophy and suggests that
196 Stim1 silencing prevents the development of pressure overload-induced hypertrophy but also reverses
199 umbers of cardiac fibroblasts in response to pressure overload-induced injury; therefore, these proce
200 tential canonical 3 (TRPC3) channel mediates pressure overload-induced maladaptive cardiac fibrosis b
201 n cardiomyocytes, and specifically regulates pressure overload-induced maladaptive cardiac remodeling
204 icant mediator of cardiac protection against pressure overload-induced pathological cardiac hypertrop
205 examined in the hearts of mice subjected to pressure overload-induced pathological cardiac hypertrop
207 ecific CIP4 gene deletion in mice attenuated pressure overload-induced pathological cardiac remodelin
210 an be serially imaged in the early stages of pressure-overload-induced heart failure and to compare t
211 en the detrimental phenotype associated with pressure-overload-induced HF and identified physiologica
214 IL-33 is crucial for translating myocardial pressure overload into a selective systemic inflammatory
215 expression of NKA-alpha2 on the heart after pressure overload is due to more efficient Ca2+ clearanc
217 drive extracellular matrix remodeling after pressure overload, leading to fibrosis and diastolic dys
219 ng of the left ventricle (LV) in response to pressure overload leads to the re-expression of the feta
220 otype, increased biomechanical stress due to pressure overload led to accelerated cardiac hypertrophy
222 mice (Pak2-CKO) under tunicamycin stress or pressure overload manifested a defective ER response, ca
224 we show that HKL blocks agonist-induced and pressure overload-mediated, cardiac hypertrophic respons
225 ogical hearts from Galphaq-overexpressing or pressure-overloaded mice after ovary removal; however, e
229 nalysis of chromatin organization with mouse pressure-overload model of myocardial stress (transverse
230 d contractile performance in postinfarct and pressure overload models of HF by in vivo echocardiograp
231 ly, induction of RBFox1 expression in murine pressure overload models substantially attenuated cardia
234 of miR-1 as treatment with beta-blockers in pressure-overloaded mouse hearts prevented its down-regu
237 d that galectin-3 may be up-regulated in the pressure-overloaded myocardium and regulate hypertrophy
238 s of activated cardiac myofibroblasts in the pressure-overloaded myocardium are, at least in part, be
242 N(G)-nitroarginine methyl ester (L-NAME) and pressure overload (n=11) from transaortic constriction (
244 se and have higher mortality after sustained pressure overload of the heart, owing to mTORC1 hyperact
245 tive beta1 integrin in adult CM; (5) in vivo pressure overload of the wild-type heart results in incr
247 gitation (AR) imposes significant volume and pressure overload on the left ventricle (LV), but such p
253 posed to aortic constriction-induced cardiac pressure-overload or in response to systemic tunicamycin
260 hanisms by which the heart adapts to chronic pressure overload, producing compensated hypertrophy and
262 ngenital alteration of SR Ca(2+) release and pressure overload promoted eccentric remodeling and HF d
263 s have found that an increase in Nox4 during pressure overload protects the heart against failure.
264 ctivation of AMPK preceding left ventricular pressure overload reduces adverse remodeling and preserv
267 gulatory events occurring exclusively during pressure overload revealed signaling networks that may b
269 in murine models of primary and secondary RV pressure overload (RVPO) and further explore biventricul
270 RV fibrosis has a dual role in patients with pressure-overloaded RVs of idiopathic pulmonary arterial
271 e VCP in the heart was able to normalize the pressure overload-stimulated hypertrophic signals by act
274 llot, the right ventricle (RV) is subject to pressure overload stress, leading to RV hypertrophy and
279 he heart before, but not after, the onset of pressure overload substantially attenuates cardiac hyper
281 l molecular regulation mediated by VCP under pressure overload that may bring new insight into the me
282 iac dysfunction with aging or in response to pressure overload that was characterized by reduced myoc
283 PPARalpha to DR1 was enhanced in response to pressure overload, that of RXRalpha was attenuated.
284 n2, we show that under conditions of in vivo pressure overload the cellular source of the exocytosis
287 ncRNA expression in murine CFs after chronic pressure overload to identify CF-enriched lncRNAs and in
288 Ras gene knockout mice and subjected them to pressure overload to induce cardiac hypertrophy and dysf
289 performed between 2 murine models of cardiac pressure overload, transverse aortic constriction bandin
291 3, and ZO-1 was significantly perturbed upon pressure overload, underscored by disorganization of the
292 fibrosis, and dysfunction induced by chronic pressure overload via transverse aorta constriction or c
298 elerated cardiac hypertrophy after 7 days of pressure overload, whereas female galectin-3 knockouts h
300 nts concentric cardiac remodeling induced by pressure overload, while inhibition of PP2A signaling pr