Circulation, Vol 84, 1715-1724, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
MI Miyamoto, HA Rockman, BD Guth, G Heusch and J Ross Jr
BACKGROUND. The effect of alpha-adrenergic receptor activation on regional
contractile function and transmural myocardial blood flow is controversial.
Accordingly, the effects of selective alpha 1- (methoxamine) and alpha
2-(BHT 933) receptor stimulation on regional contractile function and
transmural myocardial blood flow distribution were studied in 15
anesthetized open-chest dogs. METHODS AND RESULTS. The alpha-adrenergic
agonists were separately infused into the cannulated left circumflex
coronary artery during control and ischemic conditions in the same animal.
Mean coronary perfusion pressure was held constant by a servocontrolled
pump in an extracorporeal circuit. Ischemia was created by reducing
coronary perfusion pressure to the level at which percent systolic wall
thickening (%WT) decreased by 54%. Contractile function during control
conditions was unchanged, whereas under ischemic conditions a further
significant decrease in %WT of 27% occurred with either alpha 1- or alpha
2-receptor stimulation without any change in the anterior (control) wall
function. Both alpha 1- and alpha 2-receptor stimulations during control
conditions resulted in a relatively uniform transmural decrease in blood
flow with no change in the subendocardial-to-subepicardial blood flow
ratio. With alpha 1- stimulation during ischemia (n = 13), there was a
tendency toward decreased subepicardial blood flow with no change in
subendocardial flow, resulting in an increased
subendocardial-to-subepicardial blood flow ratio (0.61 +/- 0.23 to 0.82 +/-
0.40, p less than 0.05). alpha 2- Receptor stimulation during ischemia (n =
12) produced a significant decrease in subepicardial blood flow (0.45 +/-
0.20 to 0.35 +/- 0.12 ml/min/g, p less than 0.01) with no change in
subendocardial blood flow, also resulting in an increased
subendocardial-to-subepicardial blood flow ratio. CONCLUSIONS. These
results indicate the selective vasoconstriction in outer wall layers during
ischemia mediated by either alpha 1- or alpha 2-receptors can cause a
decrease in regional contractile function despite unchanged subendocardial
blood flow and improved subendocardial-to-subepicardial flow ratio. This
suggests an adverse effect of alpha-adrenergic vasoconstriction during
ischemia in this coronary perfusion pressure-controlled canine model.
ARTICLES
Effect of alpha-adrenergic stimulation on regional contractile function and myocardial blood flow with and without ischemia
Seaweed Canyon Laboratory, Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego School of Medicine, La Jolla.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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D. V. DeFily, Y. Nishikawa, and W. M. Chilian Endothelin antagonists block alpha 1-adrenergic constriction of coronary arterioles Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, March 1, 1999; 276(3): H1028 - H1034. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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