Popis: |
The effects of dopamine, dobutamine and isoproterenol on coronary hemodynamics, severity of stenosis, distal bed resistance and transmural myocardial perfusion gradients with radioactive microspheres were studied in dogs with a mild obstruction of the left circumflex coronary artery anesthetized with morphine-chloralose. Changes in transmural blood flow were related to the ratio of the diastolic aortic pressure-time index to tension-time index (DPTI/TTI) and the ratio of the distal diastolic coronary pressure-time index to tension-time index (DDPTI/TTI). At doses of 5 microgram/kg per min, dopamine had no significant effect on DPTI/TTI, DDPTI/TTI or endocardial/epicardial flow ratio; however, dobutamine produced a slight decrease in this flow ratio and in DDPTI/TTI. At doses of 10 microgram/kg per min, both drugs produced a significant (p less than 0.05) reduction in diastolic coronary pressure distal to the stenosis. DDPTI/TTI and endocardial/epicardial flow ratio without change in DPTI/TTI. In comparison, isoproterenol (0.01 and 0.05 microgram/kg per min) produced dose-related decreases in endocardial/epicardial flow ratio, DDPTI/TTI and DPTI/TTI. During infusion of each sympathomimetic agent, there was a corresponding reduction in distal bed vascular resistance but a concomitant increase in stenosis resistance. The results also show that dopamine and dobutamine, as well as isoproterenol, area capable of producing a maldistribution of coronary blood flow distal to a mild coronary arterial stenosis and that such a redistribution of glow is dependent on dose, reduction of the distal diastolic coronary pressure-time index and decrease in DDPTI/TTI. It is further concluded that hemodynamic changes distal to a coronary arterial stenosis seriously jeopardize the usefulness of DPTI/TTI; however, DDPTI/TTI can be used to predict drug effects on the endocardial/epicardial flow ratio in an ischemic area. This study demonstrates that "fixed" stenoses can undergo dynamic processes and sympathomimetic amines increase the resistance to flow through a stenotic coronary artery in the nonfailing heart. |