Aim: Various components of metabolic syndrome associate with cardiac intracellular calcium (Ca-i(2+)) mishandling, a precipitating factor in the development of heart failure. We aimed to provide a thorough description of early stage Ca-i(2+)-cycling alterations in the fructose-fed rat, an experimental model of the disorder, where insulin resistance, hypertension and dyslipidaemia act cooperatively on the heart. Method: Rats were fed with fructose-rich chow. After 6 weeks, echocardiography was performed, which was followed by measurements of myocardial Ca-i(2+) transients recorded by Indo-1 surface fluorometry in isolated perfused hearts. Sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA2a) activity was assessed by administration of its inhibitor cyclopiazonic acid (CPA). Mathematical model analysis of Ca-i(2+) transients was used to estimate kinetic properties of SR Ca2+ transporters. Protein levels of key Ca2+ handling proteins were also measured. Results: Echocardiography showed signs of cardiac hypertrophy, but in vivo and ex vivo haemodynamic performance of fructose-fed rat hearts were unaltered. However, a decline in Ca2+ sequestration capacity (-dCa(i)(2+)/dt and decay time of Ca-i(2+) transients) was observed. Model estimation showed decreased affinity for Ca2+ (higher K-m) and elevated V-max for SERCA2a. Diseased hearts were more vulnerable to CPA application. Fructose feeding caused elevation in SERCA2a and phosphorylated phospholamban (PLB) expression, while total PLB level remained unchanged. Conclusion: In early stage, metabolic syndrome primarily disturbs SERCA2a function in the heart, but consequential haemodynamic dysfunction is prevented by upregulation of SERCA2a protein level and phosphorylation pathways regulating PLB. However, this compensated state is very vulnerable to a further decline in SERCA2a function. Keywords Ca-i(2+) handling, echocardiography, isolated hearts, metabolic syndrome, SERCA2a.