(Press-News.org) Virginia Tech researchers at the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC have discovered that microscopic structural changes in the aging heart may reduce the risk of irregular heartbeats.
Medically known as arrhythmias, irregular heartbeats become more common with age and can lead to health problems.
But a new study in JACC Clinical Electrophysiology, a journal of the American College of Cardiology, revealed that a tiny gap between heart cells called the perinexus naturally narrows with age — an adaptation that may help stabilize heart rhythm.
The discovery challenges the idea that all age-related changes in the heart are harmful.
“As we get older and cardiac cells get bigger, the body compensates by making electrical communications more robust,” said Steven Poelzing, the James and Deborah Petrine professor at the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute. “Making sure the communication between cells remains high during aging appears to occur naturally to keep cardiovascular disease in check.”
Poelzing suggests that the body compensates for an aging heart by reinforcing the structure between cells to strengthen electrical communication and support the rapid influx of sodium ions that initiate each heartbeat.
Arrhythmias occur when the heart’s electrical signals become too fast, too slow, or disorganized. They affect millions worldwide and can range from harmless to life-threatening, increasing the risk of stroke, heart failure, and sudden cardiac arrest.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute reports that atrial fibrillation is the most common arrhythmia, affecting more than 2 million adults in the United States, with numbers expected to rise significantly.
To investigate how structural changes in the heart impact arrhythmia risk, researchers studied young and old guinea pig hearts, using medication to trigger a condition called sodium channel gain of function.
They found that older hearts naturally had a narrower perinexus, which appeared to protect against arrhythmias. However, when this space was artificially widened, older hearts quickly developed irregular rhythms, while younger hearts remained stable.
As heart cells grow larger with age, they adhere more tightly, maintaining electrical stability.
“If you can keep cells nicely packed, you can conceal a lot of age-associated cardiac pathologies,” said Poelzing, who is also a professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics in the Virginia Tech College of Engineering.
He compared it with a house’s foundation: If the foundation is solid, the structure can tolerate wear and tear elsewhere. But if the foundation is unstable, the whole structure is at greater risk.
From a clinical perspective, Poelzing said this study also sheds light on why arrhythmias can be difficult to detect in aging patients.
Cardiologists refer to some heart diseases as “concealed” because the body naturally compensates for electrical instability — returning to normal function before a problem can be caught on standard tests. This is why doctors often rely on long-term monitoring to detect arrhythmias before the heart re-stabilizes the issue.
An accompanying editorial in JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology commented on the study, describing the delicate, “push-and-pull” balance between the perinexus size and electrical activity in the heart. The editorial also highlighted the broader significance of the findings, suggesting that targeting perinexus size could offer new strategies for preventing arrhythmias and improving heart health as people age.
END
Changes in the aging heart may lessen the risk of irregular heartbeats
Researchers find that microscopic structural changes in heart cells may help reduce arrhythmia risk
2025-05-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study links dementia care gaps in Quebec to socio-economic status
2025-05-19
A new study has found stark differences in the dementia care received by people in richer and poorer neighbourhoods in Quebec, despite the universal health-care system.
The research was led by Dr. Claire Godard-Sebillotte, a Professor in McGill University’s Division of Geriatrics and a researcher at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre. It is the first large-scale study in Quebec to track how social conditions relate to dementia care.
The study analyzed health records from about 200,000 people newly diagnosed with dementia between 2000 and 2017. Each patient was followed for a year or until ...
Two CWRU engineering researchers receive early career awards from National Science Foundation
2025-05-19
Two Case Western Reserve University engineering faculty have been awarded National Science Foundation (NSF) Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) grants.
Computer scientist An Wang and environmental engineer Bridget Hegarty were each awarded a five-year grant to support their research programs. Hegarty also received a $1 million grant from the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
“These two faculty members pursue two very different lines of research, one around democratizing ...
Exploring the link between overlapping chronic conditions and heart failure in seniors
2025-05-19
Heart failure represents one of the most significant global health challenges, affecting millions worldwide and requiring subsequent hospitalization for many patients due to complications. For older adults in particular, heart failure rarely exists in isolation, often appearing alongside other chronic conditions that may compound its effects.
Because of this, the relationship between cardiovascular disease, kidney dysfunction, and metabolic disorders (such as diabetes) has gained increased attention in recent years. However, most clinical research on this topic has focused primarily on younger populations and excluded adults over 75—despite ...
Metallic glass catalyst paves the way for efficient water splitting
2025-05-19
Hydrogen is a promising clean energy carrier, but its adoption depends on cost-efficient production. Electrochemical water splitting is a key method, yet it relies on scarce and expensive noble metal catalyst. High-entropy metallic glasses (HEMGs) offer a promising alternative due to their amorphous structure and multi-element synergy. However, they often recrystallize during the formation of nanoporous structures via dealloying. The amorphous phase in HEMGs is vital for water splitting due to its disordered ...
After cardiac event, people who regularly sit for too long had higher risk of another event
2025-05-19
Research Highlights:
People who were less active, with a daily average of more than 14 hours of sedentary behavior, were more than twice as likely to have another cardiac event, including heart attack, surgery to treat heart issues (coronary revascularization), or to be hospitalized again within a year after the first cardiac event.
In the study of approximately 600 people, ages 21 to 96, replacing 30 minutes of sedentary behavior with light-intensity physical activity reduced the risk of another cardiovascular event or death by 50%, and replacing 30 minutes of sedentary time with 30 minutes ...
Streaked slopes on Mars probably not signs of water flow, study finds
2025-05-19
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — A new study by planetary scientists at Brown University and the University of Bern in Switzerland casts doubt on one of the most tantalizing clues that water might be flowing on present-day Mars.
For years, scientists have spied strange streaks running down Martian cliffsides and crater walls. Some have interpreted those streaks as liquid flows, suggesting the possibility of currently habitable environments on the Red Planet. But this new study, which used machine ...
Cover crops may not be solution for both crop yield, carbon sequestration
2025-05-19
ITHACA, N.Y. - People have assumed climate change solutions that sequester carbon from the air into soils will also benefit crop yields.
But a new study from Cornell University finds that most regenerative farming practices to build soil organic carbon – such as planting cover crops, leaving stems and leaves on the ground and not tilling – actually reduce yields in many situations.
The computer model analysis showed that global adoption of such practices to improve soil health can benefit either ...
Researchers take AI to “kindergarten” in order to learn more complex tasks
2025-05-19
We need to learn our letters before we can learn to read and our numbers before we can learn how to add and subtract. The same principles are true with AI, a team of New York University scientists has shown through laboratory experiments and computational modeling.
In their work, published in the journal Nature Machine Intelligence, researchers found that when recurrent neural networks (RNNs) are first trained on simple cognitive tasks, they are better equipped to handle more difficult and complex ones later on.
The paper’s authors labeled this form of training kindergarten curriculum learning as it centers on first instilling an ...
Glaciers will take centuries to recover even if global warming is reversed, scientists warn
2025-05-19
New research reveals mountain glaciers across the globe will not recover for centuries – even if human intervention cools the planet back to the 1.5°C limit, having exceeded it.
The research, led by the University of Bristol in the UK and the University of Innsbruck in Austria, presents the first global simulations of glacier change up to 2500 under so-called ‘overshoot’ scenarios, when the planet temporarily exceeds the 1.5°C limit up to 3°C before cooling back down.
The results, published today in Nature Climate Change, show that such a scenario could result in ...
Mayo Clinic discovery could mean more donor hearts by extending the preservation time
2025-05-19
ROCHESTER, Minn. — A new discovery by Mayo Clinic researchers could mean more donor hearts are available for heart transplant, giving more people a second chance at life. In findings published in Nature Cardiovascular Research, a team led by Mayo Clinic cardiac surgeon Paul Tang, M.D., Ph.D., identified a biological process that contributes to donor heart injury during cold storage. The researchers found that a drug already used to treat heart conditions can prevent this damage.
Heart transplantation is the most effective treatment for end-stage heart failure, yet fewer than ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Capuchin monkeys develop bizarre “fad” of abducting baby howlers
Antibiotic treatment in patients hospitalized for nonsevere COVID-19
Mental health trajectories among US survivors of adolescent and young adult cancer
Mice use chemical cues such as odours to sense social hierarchy
Experimental painkiller could outsmart opioids – without the high
AI chip developed for decentralized use without the cloud
Florida Inventors Hall of Fame announces 2025 inductees: Celebrating the visionaries behind the breakthroughs
Level-ground and stair adaptation for hip exoskeletons based on continuous locomotion mode perception
Helping noisy data centers fit into residential neighborhoods #ASA188
Laying the groundwork to diagnose speech impairments in children with clinical AI #ASA188
Efficient hybrid environment expression for look-and-step behavior of bipedal walking
Using sound to ‘see’ unexploded munitions on the seafloor #ASA188
Changes in the aging heart may lessen the risk of irregular heartbeats
Study links dementia care gaps in Quebec to socio-economic status
Two CWRU engineering researchers receive early career awards from National Science Foundation
Exploring the link between overlapping chronic conditions and heart failure in seniors
Metallic glass catalyst paves the way for efficient water splitting
After cardiac event, people who regularly sit for too long had higher risk of another event
Streaked slopes on Mars probably not signs of water flow, study finds
Cover crops may not be solution for both crop yield, carbon sequestration
Researchers take AI to “kindergarten” in order to learn more complex tasks
Glaciers will take centuries to recover even if global warming is reversed, scientists warn
Mayo Clinic discovery could mean more donor hearts by extending the preservation time
Faced with drought, fertilizer helps grasslands grow strong
Researchers discover why donor hearts fail in cold storage — and how to prevent it
Nimble dimples: Agile underwater vehicles inspired by golf balls
Family of parasite proteins presents new potential malaria treatment target
Study finds Reform voters more datable than Tories
National Poll: Some parents say they waited too long to stop pacifier use or thumb-sucking in children
New US$35M partnership to advance blood disorder therapies
[Press-News.org] Changes in the aging heart may lessen the risk of irregular heartbeatsResearchers find that microscopic structural changes in heart cells may help reduce arrhythmia risk