Circulation, Vol 55, 318-324, Copyright © 1977 by American Heart Association
HL Wyatt, PL Da Luz, DD Waters, HJC Swan and JS Forrester
This study of anesthetized, open-chest dogs compares the effects of primary
increases in left ventricular preload and afterload upon global and
regional myocardial function and metabolism in the presence of a left
anterior descending coronary artery stenosis (LAD). When LAD flow was
reduced to 40-50% of control, regional systolic shortening declined by 20
to 25% and regional lactate extraction changed to production. In seven
control dogs the mechanical abnormalities persisted during the 30 min of
observation, but lactate production was reduced spontaneously. In ten dogs,
increases in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) during dextran
infusion were associated with increases in cardiac output and regional
systolic shortening; however, regional lactate production also increased (P
less than 0.05) despite an augmentation in LAD flow. In seven dogs mean
arterial pressure increased by an average of 32 mm Hg during angiotensin
infusion (0.2 to 0.4 mug/kg/min); LVEDP did not change but cardiac output
decreased significantly. LAD artery flow improved markedly and lactate
production shifted to extraction (P less than 0.05) while systolic
shortening remained unchanged. When angiotensin was discontinued, lactate
extraction worsened again. Thus, in the presence of a severe coronary
stenosis, a primary increase in preload improves cardiac output but at the
expense of aggravated ischemia. In contrast, a primary increase in
afterload reduces cardiac output but may improve perfusion and lactate
uptake of the ischemic myocardium.
ARTICLES
Contrasting influences of alterations in ventricular preload and afterload upon systemic hemodynamics, function, and metabolism of ischemic myocardium
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F. Vieras and W. A. Alter III Coronary Angiograms and Myocardial Scintigraphy JAMA, June 8, 1979; 241(23): 2504 - 2505. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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