Circulation, Vol 75, 473-481, Copyright © 1987 by American Heart Association
H Tokioka, A Miyazaki, P Fung, RE Rajagopalan, S Kar, S Meerbaum, E Corday and JK Drury
Effects of intracoronary infusion (50 ml/min) of arterial blood, oxygenated
or unoxygenated Fluosol, or Plasmalyte A on hemodynamics,
electrocardiogram, regional myocardial function, and lactate metabolism
were studied in six closed-chest dogs during 2 min occlusions of the left
anterior descending coronary artery followed by 10 min of reperfusion.
Normal hemodynamics were maintained with infusion of arterial blood and
oxygenated Fluosol, whereas unoxygenated Fluosol and Plasmalyte A resulted
in hemodynamic deterioration similar to that noted with no treatment.
Ischemic zone systolic fractional area change, an index of systolic
function measured by two-dimensional echocardiography, remained normal
during the occlusion supplemented with intracoronary arterial blood (49 +/-
7%), was moderately hypokinetic with oxygenated Fluosol (31 +/- 10%), and
became severely hypokinetic with unoxygenated Fluosol (14 +/- 14%), with
Plasmalyte A (2 +/- 13%), and in the absence of treatment (5 +/- 9%). Only
infusion of arterial blood resulted in no ST segment elevation or lactate
production. Thus intracoronary infusion of arterial blood during brief
coronary occlusion maintained normal myocardial function and aerobic
metabolism. Infusion of oxygenated Fluosol resulted in amelioration of the
decline in regional function after coronary occlusion, but not complete
protection.
ARTICLES
Effects of intracoronary infusion of arterial blood or Fluosol-DA 20% on regional myocardial metabolism and function during brief coronary artery occlusions
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