Circulation, Vol 84, 2079-2090, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
GW Mergner, WB Weglicki and JH Kramer
BACKGROUND. We tested the hypothesis that secondarily produced free
radicals can be detected in venous coronary effluent without the need for
direct exposure of postischemic tissue to the spin trapping agent
alpha-phenyl-tert-butylnitrone (PBN). METHODS AND RESULTS. The left
anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) of pigs was ligated for 15, 30,
40, or 60 minutes, and the tissue was subsequently reperfused for 60
minutes. Venous effluent (6.5 ml) from the risk area was withdrawn
sequentially at 1.5-minute intervals during reperfusion. The effluent blood
was immediately infused (4.5 ml/min) with an isotonic saline solution
containing 120 mM PBN. Preischemic control effluent samples were collected
in an identical fashion. Plasma from each sample was extracted in organic
solvent and subsequently analyzed by electron spin resonance (ESR)
spectroscopy. Another group of pigs received an infusion of the metal
chelator deferoxamine mesylate (25 mg/kg/hr) into the right atrium starting
1 hour before the 40-minute ligation and continuing throughout ligation and
reperfusion. We were able to demonstrate the postischemic production of ESR
signals for PBN adduct(s) from untreated hearts having spectral
characteristics similar to an alkoxyl adduct (PBN-RO.; hyperfine splitting
constants for beta- hydrogen [alpha H] = 2.0-2.25 G; nitrogen [alpha N] =
13.5-13.75 G). The reperfusion time course of PBN adduct production had a
unique pattern: 1) multiple low-level bursts during the initial 15 minutes
of reperfusion, and 2) a prominent PBN adduct signal during a relatively
late time (20-25 minutes) of reperfusion. Total postischemic PBN adduct
production rose with increasing duration (15-60 minutes) of ischemia and
was associated with a progressive elevation of total lactate dehydrogenase
in the effluent. Infusion of deferoxamine markedly diminished PBN adduct
production as well as total release of lactate dehydrogenase. CONCLUSIONS.
These data suggest the potential feasibility of using an ex vivo ESR spin
trapping technique in blood- perfused models of cardiovascular injury and
that chelatable free iron contributes to the production of alkoxyl
radicals.
ARTICLES
Postischemic free radical production in the venous blood of the regionally ischemic swine heart. Effect of deferoxamine
Department of Anesthesiology, George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, D.C. 20037.
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