Circulation, Vol 51, 632-640, Copyright © 1975 by American Heart Association
Effects of nitroglycerin and nitroglycerin-methoxamine during acute myocardial ischemia in dogs with pre-existing multivessel coronary occlusive disease
RW Myers, JL Scherer, RA Goldstein, RE Goldstein, KM Kent and SE Epstein
Nitroglycerin (TNG) reduces ischemic injury during acute coronary occlusion
in dogs with otherwise normal coronary arteries, but its effect in the
presence of pre-existing multivessel coronary disease is unknown. We
therefore examined the influence of TNG on acute ischemia in dogs with
chronic multivessel coronary occlusions. The left anterior descending
(LAD) coronary artery was acutely occluded by a balloon cuff in conscious
dogs two weeks after placement of ameroid constrictors to produce gradual
occlusion of the obtuse marginal and posterior descending coronary
arteries. Adequacy of balloon and ameroid coronary occlusion and degree of
collateralization were assessed by coronary angiography. Nitroglycerin
decreased arterial pressure and increased heart rate. Myocardial ischemia,
determined after LAD occlusion by summing ST-segment elevation (sigmaST)
from eight intramyocardial electrodes, lessened with TNG in those six dogs
whose heart rate increased less than 50 per cent, but increased in those
four whose heart rate increased greater than 50 per cent. When TNG-induced
change in either heart rate or arterial pressure was prevented by adding
methoxamine, sigma ST was diminished even more (avg decrease 25 per cent; P
smaller than 0.05). We conclude that, in the presence of pre-existing
multivessel coronary occlusions, 1) TNG reduces ischemic injury during
experimental acute coronary occlusion provided arterial pressure and heart
rate responses are not excessive and 2) uniform improvement occurs when
pressure and rate responses are abolished by an alpha-adrenergic agonist.
Although results in animal studies must be extrapolated to the clinical
situation with caution, these findings suggest that a similar pharmacologic
approach might be applicable to the treatment of acute myocardial
infarction in man, even in the presence of multivessel disease.