Circulation, Vol 72, 431-439, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
J Vinten-Johansen, TA Edgerton, HR Howe, PA Gayheart, SA Mills, G Howard and AR Cordell
Functional recovery with surgical revascularization of acutely ischemic
myocardium has not been compared with its nonsurgical counterpart in
experimental preparations of coronary occlusion. This study compares the
functional and metabolic recovery of ischemic (1 hr coronary occlusion)
segments revascularized either by restoration of coronary patency
(simulating nonsurgical recanalization, e.g., angioplasty) or by surgical
revascularization with multidose hypothermic potassium blood cardioplegic
solution. Twenty-two anesthetized open-chest dogs were instrumented with
Millar micromanometer-tip catheters to measure left ventricular and aortic
pressures. Piezoelectric ultrasonic dimension gauges were implanted in the
subendocardium supplied by the left anterior descending coronary artery to
measure segmental contractile function. In five dogs, only biopsy samples
were obtained for control measurements of ATP, creatine phosphate, and
tissue water content. In the remaining 17 dogs, the left anterior
descending artery and collaterals were ligated for 1 hr. The ligatures were
removed in eight dogs and coronary perfusion continued for 2 hr, simulating
nonsurgical reperfusion. The remaining nine dogs were placed on
cardiopulmonary bypass and the hearts were arrested for 1 hr with multidose
(every 20 min) blood cardioplegic solution enhanced with glutamate and
aspartate, simulating surgical revascularization (coronary artery bypass
grafting). The coronary ligatures were not released until the second
cardioplegic infusion, simulating graft placement. One hour of coronary
occlusion placed 39.4 +/- 2.5% of the left ventricle at risk, and converted
active systolic shortening to persistent paradoxical bulging (25.2 +/- 2.2%
to -5.8 +/- 1.2% systolic shortening).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Immediate functional recovery and avoidance of reperfusion injury with surgical revascularization of short-term coronary occlusion
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