Daily Mail

DA VINCI’S WORK OF HEART

Scientists scoffed at his claims about muscle fibres... but now study suggests they ARE important after all

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

LEONARDO da Vinci was way ahead of his time, sketching out submarines, gliders and cars before they even existed.

But he may also have detected a structure in the heart which can stop op it failing.

The Italian artist and scientist drew a network of muscle fibres called the he trabeculae in the 16th century, speculatin­g ng that they warmed the blood as it ran n through the organ.

Modern scientists disagreed, insisting g the only purpose of these fibres that line e the surface was to help get oxygen into o the hearts of babies in the womb.

But now evidence suggests the trabeculae ut may be more important than thought – but not for the reason da Vinci suspected. . People with fewer branches to the fibres s appear to be more at risk of heart failure.

Researcher­s, including from Imperial l College London, looked at scans of more than 18,000 people in the UK.

They found genetic quirks among those with fewer branches on their trabeculae. Those same quirks often appeared in a separate group of almost 50,000 people with heart failure, a condition affecting around 920,000 people in the UK.

Computer models of the fibres da Vinci drew centuries ago suggest more branches help the heart by allowing blood to pump over it more efficientl­y. Heart failure occurs when the heart struggles to pump blood around the body.

Dr Declan O’Regan, who led the study from the London Institute of Medical Sciences at Imperial said: ‘Leonardo da Vinci sketched s these intricate muscles inside the heart half a millennium ago, and it is only now that we are beginning to understand how important they are to human health.’

The findings, published in the journal Nature, could help people understand their risk of heart failure and take action.

It is possible to increase the number of branches by exercising, which makes muscles and fibres in the heart stronger and complex.

 ??  ?? Artistic Art discovery: Da Vinci, above, sketched the fibres on a diagram of the heart, left
Artistic Art discovery: Da Vinci, above, sketched the fibres on a diagram of the heart, left

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