Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research & Training Institute

The Science of Myocardial Recovery: Understanding the Healing Process of the Heart

The Science of Myocardial Recovery and The Healing Process After Heart Attack

3D illustration of Heart, medical concept - The Science of Myocardial Recovery: Understanding the Healing Process of the Heart Graphic

Myocardial infarction, better known as heart attack, is one of the leading causes of death in the United States. According to the CDC, around 805,000 people have a heart attack every single year, which equates to one every 40 seconds. In one-fifth of the cases, the heart attack is silent, and while the heart is damaged, the individual is not even aware of it. 

The good news is that myocardial recovery – healing the heart after an attack – is possible. However, it’s important to understand the process, as well as the stages leading up to a heart attack.

What Are the 4 Stages of Myocardial Infarction?

The need for myocardial recovery is based on having a heart attack in the first place. In most cases, that stems from damage caused by myocardial infarction (the attack). While most people are familiar with the Hollywood depiction of a heart attack, the truth is that they do not always occur quickly, acutely, or painfully. The four stages of myocardial infarction are as follows:

1. Fixed Coronary Stenosis

Stenosis is a narrowing or constricting of a passageway; in this case, it refers to a fixed narrowing of a coronary artery.

2. Acute Plaque Change

Plaques lining the artery change, either through rupturing or hemorrhaging.

3. Coronary Artery Thrombosis

This is the development of a blood clot that cuts off some or all the blood flow to the heart.

4. Vasoconstriction

This is a construction of blood vessels that increases blood pressure by slowing or blocking the flow of blood.

Of course, heart attacks are not the only things that can damage the heart and lead to a need for myocardial recovery. Myocarditis can also damage the heart muscle.

What Is Myocarditis? 

Technically, myocarditis is an inflammation of the heart muscle, specifically the middle layer of the heart wall, called the myocardium. It’s usually caused by a virus but can also be caused by inflammatory conditions. 

When inflamed, the heart cannot pump blood efficiently. The condition can also cause other symptoms, including arrhythmias (irregular heartbeat), chest pain, and shortness of breath.

Can the heart repair itself after myocarditis? Yes, myocardial recovery is possible. In many cases, myocarditis is self-resolving, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine. Some patients will require treatment and will not resolve for several months. Severe cases can lead to scarring, which forces the heart to work harder to pump blood and oxygen.

What Are the Stages of Myocardial Infarction Healing?

Myocardial recovery after an infarction usually follows specific stages, although they tend to overlap one another.

1. Inflammatory Response – Initially, the body creates inflammation as a defense response.

2. Proliferative Phase – During the proliferative phase, chemokines control various cell types, including reparative macrophages that help reduce inflammation. 

3. Healing Phase – The healing phase involves the formation of scar tissue.

Overall, healing from a heart attack can take as little as two weeks or as long as three months, depending on the severity of the damage. However, there are things you can do to help increase your body’s ability to heal itself and reduce the risk of having another heart attack (30% of heart attacks every year are second heart attacks). 

Note that if you’ve had a heart attack, you are 20% more likely to have another one within five years than someone who has never had a heart attack.

Important Lifestyle Changes for Myocardial Recovery and Risk Reduction

If you’ve suffered a heart attack, you’ll notice during recovery that your body may not behave as before. You may not be able to sustain the same physical activity level, engage in the same exercises, and even have difficulty controlling your emotions. 

Activity Levels

Try to follow a gradual return to your normal lifestyle and activities that balances rest and recovery with getting up and active. Your doctor will help guide you here.

Exercise

Exercise is one of the most important preventative measures against heart attacks, but it also plays a central role in your recovery and reducing the risk of a second heart attack. A cardiac rehabilitation program can help with your initial heart attack recovery, but you’ll need to make time for exercise each day once the program ends.

Heart Healthy Diet

You’ll need to follow a heart-healthy diet for myocardial recovery. A healthy diet for your heart should include reducing the amount of saturated fat, sodium, and sugar you consume. Avoid red meat, highly processed meats (bacon and deli meat, for instance), and refined grains (white flour, etc.).

Heart Attack Recovery Conclusion

Myocardial recovery after a heart attack is possible. Many people go on to live long, full lives. However, you must get adequate exercise and follow a healthy diet, along with quitting smoking and limiting (or eliminating) alcohol. 

Cardiac Recovery Research at the CVRTI

The Drakos Lab

Several different labs at the Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research and Training Institute are very interested in studying myocardial recovery from HF. First, the Drakos lab and clinical research team has identified molecular, cellular, and physiologic features that influence myocardial recovery after circulatory support with assist devices which has altered paradigms in the field and has generated new therapeutic approaches.

Following a bedside to bench and back approach Dr. Drakos’ research team has been using myocardial tissue findings from cardiac recovery patients to guide their basic science investigations to inhibit or overactivate these specific targets using small and large animal models. With this specific approach Dr Drakos’ research identified novel therapeutic targets for myocardial recovery: (a) MCT4 inhibition, (b) VDAC2 activation and (c) AEBP1 inhibition. Next, the Selzman lab is interested in developing “real-world” therapies to be able to help the heart recover following injury. They have very interesting data to suggest that the use of amniotic fluid (“Mother Nature’s Cocktail)” is beneficial to the heart muscle after injury.

The Shaw Lab

The Shaw lab has been working on defining the paradigm of Targeted Delivery which describes how the cytoskeleton delivers membrane proteins directly to their functional membrane subdomain and why there is less delivery in failing hearts. In the process, the Lab discovered and named a new protein: cBIN1. This protein has a fundamental role in organizing the internal architecture of heart muscle cells and has important translational implications in the treatment of chronic heart failure to achieve myocardial recovery (cBIN1).

The Shaw and Hong Labs

The Shaw and Hong labs have together developed a gene therapy for cBIN1 that may prove extremely favorable to HF patients. Furthermore, in the clinical research arena Drs. Drakos, Selzman and others have led in the field of myocardial recovery several studies. They published structure-function studies characterizing in detail the impact of mechanical unloading on reverse cardiac remodeling. Furthermore, they identified practical clinical predictors, including left ventricular torsion, circulating TNFα and IFNγ and myocardial microstructural changes, that effectively guide heart failure patient selection prior to guide the most appropriate therapeutic interventions.

Altogether, this body of work led to the establishment of the award-winning Utah Cardiac Recovery Program (UCAR) which is currently considered one of the leading programs in the field nationally and internationally. The cutting-edge research that is conducted at the CVRTI surrounding myocardial recovery and cardiac regeneration will pave the way for future therapies to reduce mortality rates and improve the quality of life for the greater HF community. 

The Role of Lifestyle Factors in Myocardial Recovery: Nurturing Your Heart Back to Health

The Role of Lifestyle Factors in Myocardial Recovery: Nurturing Your Heart Back to Health

Blue and Pink Heart Graphic

Few health conditions are as widely recognized as heart attacks. And yet heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States. According to the American Heart Association, it was responsible for almost 930,000 deaths in the US in 2020 alone through coronary heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure, heart failure, and arterial diseases. 

Sadly, many of those deaths could have been prevented. Simple, effective lifestyle changes can lead to myocardial recovery (improving heart health) and a dramatic risk reduction. 

What lifestyle changes can you make? How much can they enhance myocardial recovery and reduce your risk of heart attack, stroke, and other related disease?

Exercise to Prevent Heart Attack

First, let’s tackle exercise. You don’t need to suddenly become an Olympian. Johns Hopkins recommends getting at least 30 minutes of brisk exercise at least five days a week. 

That might be lacing up your running shoes and going for a jog, but “brisk” has many meanings. You could go for a swim, play a game of tennis, or just go for a fast walk. The point is to get your heart rate up and keep it up for a solid half hour during these sessions for myocardial recovery. 

Want an alternative? Harvard Health notes that just 15 minutes a day of moderate exercise can make a difference in heart health. That might mean going for a quick run, hitting the elliptical machine, or an indoor bike, but there’s no need to spend hours and hours a day in heart-pounding workouts. 

Your Diet Affects Myocardial Recovery

Next on our list of lifestyle changes for heart disease is diet. And understand that “diet” here does not mean a short-term weight-loss program you’ll stop when you reach a target weight. In this sense, it means the foods you eat over the long term. The standard American diet (SAD) isn’t particularly well-suited to supporting good heart health. 

So, What Should You Do?

Today, the Mediterranean diet is one of the most often recommended for anyone searching for a way to prevent a heart attack from happening. It’s also recognized as one of the best diets for overall health, even if you aren’t at an increased risk for heart disease. 

According to Healthline, the Mediterranean diet focuses more on fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and healthy fats from fish and nuts. It also includes a dramatic cut in processed foods, sugars, refined grains, and limited alcohol consumption. A study published in the Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences supports risk reduction. 

You don’t have to follow the Mediterranean diet for myocardial recovery. Some simple changes can cut your risks and give you plenty of freedom regarding what you put on your plate. These include:

  • Reduce or eliminate red meat
  • Reduce or eliminate refined grains (white bread, for instance)
  • Reduce your intake of saturated fat
  • Reduce your sodium intake
  • Increase the amount of soluble and insoluble fiber
  • Avoid processed meats with nitrates (bacon, hot dogs, deli meat, etc.)
  • Watch your intake of added sugars
  • Prepare more of your meals at home

Tobacco and Alcohol: Understanding Their Impact on Myocardial Recovery

Now let’s talk about two lifestyle factors that have an outsized effect on your overall cardiovascular health – smoking and drinking. 

Tobacco

Smoking has significant impacts on your entire body, not just your lungs. It increases your heart rate, tightens major arteries, and raises blood pressure. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) points out that smoking also increases plaque formation in blood vessels, leading to coronary artery disease, and that the chemicals in cigarettes thicken your blood, encouraging clotting within the veins and arteries.

Quitting smoking as soon as possible can help reduce your risk of heart attack, stroke, and coronary artery disease. It can also lower your blood pressure and heart rate, and you’ll begin to reverse the damage caused by smoking. 

Don’t assume that it’s just cigarettes that cause these problems, either. Smokeless tobacco (dip in all its forms) has many of the same effects. Vaping can also significantly affect your heart health.

Alcohol

Alcohol is something of a mixed bag when it comes to heart health. There is some evidence that limited intake of alcohol supports good cardiovascular health. However, excessive drinking can lead to high blood pressure, stroke, and heart attack. Even low to moderate amounts of alcohol affect circulation, inflammation, programmed cell death, mitochondrial dysfunction, and anatomical damage to the cardiovascular system.  

In Conclusion

Myocardial recovery reduces your risk of heart attack, stroke, and other cardiovascular diseases. It doesn’t have to be complicated, either. Positive changes to your diet and exercise routine, limiting alcohol intake, and stopping smoking, can all dramatically improve your risks.

Cardiac Recovery Research at the CVRTI

Drakos Lab

Several different labs at the Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research and Training Institute are very interested in studying myocardial recovery from HF. First, the Drakos lab and clinical research team has identified molecular, cellular, and physiologic features that influence myocardial recovery after circulatory support with assist devices which has altered paradigms in the field and has generated new therapeutic approaches.

Following a bedside to bench and back approach Dr. Drakos’ research team has been using myocardial tissue findings from cardiac recovery patients to guide their basic science investigations to inhibit or overactivate these specific targets using small and large animal models. With this specific approach Dr Drakos’ research identified novel therapeutic targets for myocardial recovery: (a) MCT4 inhibition, (b) VDAC2 activation and (c) AEBP1 inhibition.

Selzman Lab

Next, the Selzman lab is interested in developing “real-world” therapies to be able to help the heart recover following injury. They have very interesting data to suggest that the use of amniotic fluid (“Mother Nature’s Cocktail)” is beneficial to the heart muscle after injury. The Shaw lab has been working on defining the paradigm of Targeted Delivery which describes how the cytoskeleton delivers membrane proteins directly to their functional membrane subdomain and why there is less delivery in failing hearts. In the process, the Lab discovered and named a new protein: cBIN1. This protein has a fundamental role in organizing the internal architecture of heart muscle cells and has important translational implications in the treatment of chronic heart failure to achieve myocardial recovery (cBIN1).

Shaw and Hong Labs

The Shaw and Hong labs have together developed a gene therapy for cBIN1 that may prove extremely favorable to HF patients. Furthermore, in the clinical research arena Drs. Drakos, Selzman and others have led in the field of myocardial recovery several studies. They published structure-function studies characterizing in detail the impact of mechanical unloading on reverse cardiac remodeling. Furthermore, they identified practical clinical predictors, including left ventricular torsion, circulating TNFα and IFNγ and myocardial microstructural changes, that effectively guide heart failure patient selection prior to guide the most appropriate therapeutic interventions.

Altogether, this body of work led to the establishment of the award-winning Utah Cardiac Recovery Program (UCAR) which is currently considered one of the leading programs in the field nationally and internationally. The cutting-edge research that is conducted at the CVRTI surrounding myocardial recovery and cardiac regeneration will pave the way for future therapies to reduce mortality rates and improve the quality of life for the greater HF community. 

Reviving Hope: Advances in Myocardial Recovery Therapies

Reviving Hope: Advances in Myocardial Recovery Therapies

3d illustration of human heart and cardiogram with mesh texture modeling on abstract futuristic blue background. Concept of digital technologies in medicine – Myocardial Recovery Therapy

Cardiovascular health has come a long way in the past decades. Heart failure (HF) and heart attacks used to be almost a death sentence for many patients. However, advances in myocardial recovery therapies and several other treatment options have paved a new “path of hope” for patients and their families.

What is Cardiac Regenerative Medicine?

Although cardiac regenerative medicine is still relatively new, it’s progressing fast due to health organizations and medical research institutions gaining insight into how much potential value there is to be had.

The field of cardiac regenerative medicine refers to the study of regenerating the cardiac system and its components, including the heart muscle. It involves looking at the heart as both an organ and a muscle and studying how it can use energy to heal following an injury or stress. There’s even new research that is looking at how stem cell therapies could enhance the cardiovascular system’s natural regenerative abilities.

What is Myocardial Recovery?

Heart failure (HF) is a condition that results from long-term, chronic damage to the heart muscle, which eventually leads to functional deterioration and increased mortality. Over the years, medical professionals have been working to better understand HF and how to promote recovery. The National Institutes of Health Working Group on Advancing the Science of Myocardial Recovery defines cardiac recovery as: “a reversal of the pathological state of the myocardium with significant improvement in cardiac structure and function sufficient to achieve a sustained remission from recurrent heart failure events.” Put simply, myocardial recovery refers to your heart getting significantly better after a heart attack or other damage that may occur.

Heart Regeneration

Heart attacks are the leading cause of HF and mortality in Americans. During and shortly after a heart attack occurs, millions of heart cells die which make it hard for the heart to contract and pump blood to the body. These cells are not replaced as part of the normal healing process, so there’s little help for heart attack patients beyond trying to make the most of the cells that they have left.

It was originally thought that people had all the heart cells they would need for their lives. However, scientists have discovered within the last decade that the heart muscle cells can be replaced, just like other cells in the body. As a result of this, there has been an uptick in research studies investigating how heart muscle cells can be regenerated. Many of these studies are looking at the use of stem cells as a potential solution since the heart appears to use it own stem cells for replacement, too.  

Reverse Remodeling

One of the biggest impacts on the potential for recovery is reverse remodeling. Reverse remodeling refers to a significant improvement in the heart’s function from a therapeutic intervention. The heart can work more effectively because certain procedures or treatments help to improve its pumping function.

What You Can Do

If you or someone you love is suffering from HF or cardiovascular disease, you need to know there is hope. You also need to find a cardiologist who follows the latest news and research so that you know you’re getting the best possible treatment options for your condition. It may also help if you do some research on cardiac recovery for yourself so that you know what to expect, as well as what to ask when working with a cardiac specialist.

Final Thoughts

Although there’s still a long way to go, there is a lot more hope than there used to be for cardiac patients who are diagnosed with heart failure or who have suffered major heart attacks. As studies progress and new discoveries are made, more opportunities for myocardial recovery will present themselves, allowing everyone a chance to get their life back and perhaps even extend it a little longer. Heart failure is a progressive disease that impacts the lives of millions, but with continued research, there’s hope that it can be stopped in its tracks and the heart can recover.

Cardiac Recovery Research at the CVRTI

Several different labs at the Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research and Training Institute are very interested in studying myocardial recovery from HF.

Drakos Lab Research on Myocardial Recovery

First, the Drakos lab and clinical research team has identified molecular, cellular, and physiologic features that influence myocardial recovery after circulatory support with assist devices which has altered paradigms in the field and has generated new therapeutic approaches. Following a bedside to bench and back approach Dr. Drakos’ research team has been using myocardial tissue findings from cardiac recovery patients to guide their basic science investigations to inhibit or overactivate these specific targets using small and large animal models. With this specific approach Dr Drakos’ research identified novel therapeutic targets for myocardial recovery: (a) MCT4 inhibition, (b) VDAC2 activation and (c) AEBP1 inhibition.

Selzman Lab Research on Myocardial Recovery

Next, the Selzman lab is interested in developing “real-world” therapies to be able to help the heart recover following injury. They have very interesting data to suggest that the use of amniotic fluid (“Mother Nature’s Cocktail)” is beneficial to the heart muscle after injury. The Shaw lab has been working on defining the paradigm of Targeted Delivery which describes how the cytoskeleton delivers membrane proteins directly to their functional membrane subdomain and why there is less delivery in failing hearts. In the process, the Lab discovered and named a new protein: cBIN1. This protein has a fundamental role in organizing the internal architecture of heart muscle cells and has important translational implications in the treatment of chronic heart failure to achieve myocardial recovery (cBIN1).

Shaw & Hong Lab’s Research on Myocardial Recovery

The Shaw and Hong labs have together developed a gene therapy for cBIN1 that may prove extremely favorable to HF patients. Furthermore, in the clinical research arena Drs. Drakos, Selzman and others have led in the field of myocardial recovery several studies. They published structure-function studies characterizing in detail the impact of mechanical unloading on reverse cardiac remodeling. Furthermore, they identified practical clinical predictors, including left ventricular torsion, circulating TNFα and IFNγ and myocardial microstructural changes, that effectively guide heart failure patient selection prior to guide the most appropriate therapeutic interventions.

CVRTI & The UCAR Program

Altogether, this body of work led to the establishment of the award-winning Utah Cardiac Recovery Program (UCAR) which is currently considered one of the leading programs in the field nationally and internationally. The cutting-edge research that is conducted at the CVRTI surrounding myocardial recovery and cardiac regeneration will pave the way for future therapies to reduce mortality rates and improve the quality of life for the greater HF community.  

What is Myocardial Recovery?

What Is Myocardial Recovery?

Red Transparent Body with Heart - What Is Myocardial Recovery Blog Graphic

Heart failure (HF) is characterized by a pathologic process known as “remodeling” that involves impairment of the function of the heart and progressive dilation of the chambers of the heart. The process of remodeling is associated with adverse cellular, structural, and functional myocardial changes, that had long been deemed progressive and unidirectional. Clinical experience has shown that the process of remodeling can be delayed or even reversed, either spontaneously in the setting of acute cardiac injury (e.g., acute myocarditis and other), or to be facilitated through guideline-directed HF medical therapy including cardiac resynchronization therapy in chronic HF . Mechanical circulatory support (MCS) with left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) is an established treatment modality for patients with advanced disease. Besides their role in supporting the systemic circulation (more info provided below), they provide significant off-loading of the heart, creating a favorable environment for reversal of the structural and functional alterations of the failing heart, a process known as “reverse remodeling” . It has been repeatedly shown that a subset of advanced HF patients can significantly improve their cardiac structure and function while on durable LVAD, to the point where withdrawal of the LVAD support can be considered . In light of these findings, the concept of HF irreversibility has been refuted and the notion that severe HF indicates irreversible end-stage disease has been revised. The National Institutes of Healtdddh (NIH) organized a working group of experts from around the globe and the consensus recommendations derived from this body defined myocardial recovery as a reversal of the pathological state of the myocardium with significant improvement in heart structure and function sufficient to achieve a sustained remission from hospitalizations and other adverse events that take place in patients with chronic heart failure.

Left Ventricular Assist Device (LVAD)

A left ventricular assist device is a form of mechanical circulatory support used in the treatment of patients who have been diagnosed with advanced HF. An LVAD is a pump that helps your heart circulate blood from the left ventricle to the rest of the body. LVAD devices are implantable devices commonly used as a bridge to transplant in patients for whom medication alone didn’t improve their heart function. They are also used as lifetime permanent therapy in advanced HF patients that are not eligible for heart transplantation due to various contraindications.

Studies have shown that using an LVAD in combination with guideline directed medical therapies  have the potential for increasing the probability for recovery from HF. These studies were conducted using standard drug therapy protocol, optimization of the LVAD speed, and consistent testing of the myocardial function in participants . The ultimate goal is full myocardial recovery with LVAD explantation with no recurrence of heart failure symptoms.

Reverse Remodeling

A main function of the heart is to pump blood to the lungs and the rest of the body. When a patient experiences heart failure, the heart isn’t working correctly, and blood is not pumped adequately from the heart to the rest of the organs. This can lead to a back-up of fluid in the lungs as well as a decrease in the amount of blood the heart ejects. Some patients who experience heart failure require a transplant or the assistance of an LVAD.

Reverse remodeling represents a significant improvement of the heart due to a positive response to treatment . When reverse remodeling occurs, there is an improvement in the heart’s ability to fill and eject blood to the body. Doctors often notice improvements to the size of the ventricle. As the ventricle size normalizes, it often leads to improved heart function (ejection fraction is one of the metrics of heart function that is widely used). When reverse remodeling is identified, doctors can optimize the pump speed of the LVAD and continue with pharmacological treatment to advance the reverse remodeling and facilitate myocardial recovery .

Advancing the Science of Reverse Remodeling and Heart Recovery

Understanding the biological mechanisms driving heart recovery following LVAD may be paramount to understand and facilitate cardiac improvement in the broader HF population. By examining heart tissue samples from patients with various degrees of LVAD-mediated cardiac improvement could lead to the discovery of novel therapeutic targets . The overarching goal is to improve our understanding of cardiac biology and the associated molecular, cellular, and structural changes that are implicated in cardiac recovery, and manipulate them in a way that could be beneficial for the greater HF population. This research is currently being conducted by several investigators at the Nora Eccles Harrison CVRTI  and the University of Utah Health (visit lab websites listed below in the corresponding section).

Conclusion

Heart failure is a progressive disease in which the heart does not function properly to pump blood throughout the body and medications are only one way to treat heart failure. When patients don’t seem to respond to pharmaceutical treatments, they may undergo mechanical circulatory support with a device known as an LVAD. The LVAD is implanted into the left ventricle to improve pumping of blood from the heart to the rest of the body. Studies show that if standard medical therapy is used in conjunction with the LVAD, the heart can begin to regain function and show reverse remodeling. Some patients are fortunate enough to experience significant heart reverse remodeling and sustainable myocardial recovery.

CVRTI Labs involved in HF and Myocardial Recovery Research: