Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Combined antiretroviral therapy with low- or normal-protein, high-calorie diets appears to induce significant deleterious electrocardiographic changes in a rodent model.
- Journal:
- Brazilian journal of medical and biological research = Revista brasileira de pesquisas medicas e biologicas
- Year:
- 2026
- Authors:
- Chege, B M et al.
- Affiliation:
- School of Health Sciences
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
The introduction of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) has significantly reduced AIDS-related morbidity and mortality. However, the prevalence of age-associated comorbidities, particularly cardiovascular diseases (CVD), has increased, becoming a leading cause of mortality in people living with HIV. This study investigated the interaction between cART regimens and dietary composition on electrocardiographic (ECG) parameters and myocardial histopathology. A total of 120 weanling Sprague Dawley rats were allocated to one of three diets for 15 weeks: normal chow, a calorie-dense low protein (CDLP) diet, or a calorie-dense normal protein (CDNP) diet. Each dietary group was then subdivided into four treatment groups for a further 9 weeks: a standard group (normal saline), Test group 1 (dolutegravir (DTG) plus tesamorelin), Test group 2 (DTG only), and a positive control (classical cART regimen). ECG recordings and histological assessments were performed at week 24. Significant intergroup variations in ECG indices were observed, including Q, R, S, and T wave amplitudes, PR interval, QRS duration, ST height, and QTc (all P<0.0001). Myocardial fibrosis (P<0.0001) was evident in animals from the TG2 (DTG only) and PC (classical regimen) groups maintained on CDLP and CDNP diets. These findings demonstrated that CDLP and CDNP diets, combined with DTG-based or classical cART regimens, exerted deleterious cardiac effects, promoting myocardial fibrosis that disrupts normal electrical conduction and may predispose to arrhythmogenesis. Tesamorelin prevented these effects, implicating growth hormone pathway dysfunction in the underlying pathology.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42018810/