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Improved energy preservation following gentle reperfusion after hypothermic, ischemic cardioplegia in infarcted rat hearts
12
Citations
24
References
1987
Year
Gentle ReperfusionIschemic CardioplegiaHeart FailureCardiogenic ShockCardiovascular DiseaseRat HeartsPhysiologyAdenosine TriphosphateEarly ReperfusionCardiovascular PhysiologyImproved Energy PreservationCardiovascular FunctionReperfusion InjuryMedicineCardiologyCardiac MechanicAnesthesiology
The influence of temperature and pressure during early reperfusion after 2 h of hypothermic, cardioplegic ischemia was investigated. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and creatine-phosphate (CP) were measured after 45-min reperfusion. The experiments were carried out in normal and previously infarcted rat hearts (the left coronary artery having been ligated 3 weeks earlier). Four groups, each containing six hearts, were studied. Group 1 consisted of normal hearts reperfused with an abrupt rise in temperature and pressure, group 2 of normal hearts exposed to slowly rising temperature and pressure, and group 3 and 4 of previously infarcted hearts. Reperfusion procedures in groups 3 and 4 were the same as in group 1 and 2, respectively. The study showed that previously infarcted hearts have a lowered tolerance to ischemia and that the reperfusion technique may influence the preservation of myocardial energetics, although this influence was not statistically significant in normal hearts following only 2 h of ischemia. The gently reperfused infarcted hearts had energy stores equal to the normal hearts after 2 h of ischemia and 45 min of reperfusion, whereas the infarcted hearts reperfused in a rougher mode had significantly lowered values (P less than 0.05 for ATP and P less than 0.01 for CP).
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