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Living organisms exhibit specific responses when confronted with
sudden changes in their environmental conditions. The ability of
the cells to acclimate to their new environment is the integral
driving force for adaptive modification of the cells. Such
adaptation involves a number of cellular and biochemical alteration
including metabolic homeostasis and reprogramming of gene
expression. Changes in metabolic pathways are generally short-lived
and reversible, while the consequences of gene expression are a
long-term process and may lead to permanent alternation in the
pattern of adaptive responses.
The heart possesses remarkable ability to adapt itself against any
stressful situation by increasing resistance to the adverse
consequences. Stress composes the foundation of many degenerative
heart diseases including atherosclerosis, spasm, thrombosis,
cardiomyopathy, and congestive heart failure. Based on the concept
that excessive stress may play a crucial role in the pathogenesis
of ischemic heart disease, attempts were made to design methods for
preventing of myocardial injury. Creation of stress reactions by
repeated ischemia and reperfusion or subjecting the hearts to heat
or oxidative stress enables them to meet the future stress
challenge. Repeated stress exposures adapt the heart to withstand
more severe stress reactions probably by upregulating the cellular
defense and direct accumulation of intracellular mediators, which
presumably constitute the material basis of increased adaptation to
stress. Thus, the powerful cardioprotective effect of adaptation is
likely to originate at the cellular and molecular levels that
compose fundamental processes in the prophylaxis of such diseases.
Volume six of the Advances in Organ Biology series contains
state-of-the-art reviews on myocardial preservation and cellular
adaptation from the leading authorities in this subject.
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