Adenosine-Supplemented Blood Cardioplegia Attenuates Postischemic Dysfunction After Severe Regional Ischemia
Autor: | Robert A. Guyton, Vinod H. Thourani, D. C. Han, Jacob Vinten-Johansen, Steven T Shearer, D. G. L. Van Wylen, Zhi Qing Zhao, Russell S. Ronson, Sara L Katzmark |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 1999 |
Předmět: |
Adenosine
Ischemia Blood Pressure Myocardial Reperfusion Injury Anterior Descending Coronary Artery law.invention Dogs law Physiology (medical) medicine Carnivora Cardiopulmonary bypass Animals Analgesics Cardiopulmonary Bypass biology Vascular disease business.industry Fissipedia Receptors Purinergic P1 medicine.disease biology.organism_classification Blood pressure Anesthesia Heart Arrest Induced business Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Circulation. 100 |
ISSN: | 1524-4539 0009-7322 |
DOI: | 10.1161/circ.100.suppl_2.ii-376 |
Popis: | Background—Various studies have reported that the administration of adenosine (ADO) in cardioplegia reduces myocardial ischemic injury, but this timing may not utilize ADO’s potential against myocardial reperfusion injury. This study tested the hypothesis that ADO-supplemented blood cardioplegia (BCP) or ADO administered during reperfusion reduces postischemic dysfunction after severe regional ischemia.Methods and Results—After 75 minutes of left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion, total cardiopulmonary bypass was initiated; cold (4°C) antegrade BCP (8:1 blood:crystalloid) was delivered every 20 minutes for the first 3 doses, and 27°C BCP was delivered for the terminal infusion. Dogs (n=6 per group) received unsupplemented BCP, ADO (100 μmol/L/L) supplemented in all infusions of BCP (ADO-CP), or ADO (100 μmol · L−1· L−1) supplemented only in the terminal infusion of BCP followed by intravenous ADO (140 μg · kg−1· min−1) infusion for the first 30 minutes of reperfusion (ADO-R). Postischemic regional systolic shortening was significantly greater in the ADO-R group (5±2.0%) than in the BCP group (−3±1.0%), but not in the ADO-CP group (2±0.2%). Postischemic regional diastolic stiffness in the area at risk during end reperfusion was lower with ADO-R (1.8±0.3%) than with ADO-CP (2.7±0.3%) or BCP (4.4±0.5%). Infarct size was reduced in the ADO-CP (29±2%) and ADO-R (21±2%) groups compared with the BCP group (42±4%). Edema in the myocardial area at risk was decreased in the ADO-CP (82±0.2%) and ADO-R (80±0.4%) groups compared with the BCP group (86±0.7%). Adherence of fluorescently labeled neutrophils (PMNs) to postischemic coronary artery endothelium was attenuated by ADO-R (55±2 PMNs/mm2), but not by ADO-CP (114±5 PMNs/mm2), compared with BCP (118±3 PMNs/mm2).Conclusions—The results show that BCP supplemented with ADO reduces infarct size, preserves postischemic systolic and diastolic regional function but does not attenuate coronary artery endothelial dysfunction unless administered during reperfusion. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |