Publication | Closed Access
Intracellular Sodium Accumulation During Ischemia as the Substrate for Reperfusion Injury
178
Citations
26
References
1999
Year
To elucidate the role of intracellular Na+ kinetics during ischemia and reperfusion in postischemic contractile dysfunction, intracellular Na+ concentration ([Na+]i) was measured in isolated perfused rat hearts using 23Na nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The extension of the ischemic period from 9 minutes to 15, 21, and 27 minutes (at 37 degrees C) increased [Na+]i at the end of ischemia from 270.0+/-10.4% of preischemic level (mean+/-SE, n=5) to 348.4+/-12.0% (n=5), 491.0+/-34.0% (n=7), and 505.3+/-12.1% (n=5), respectively, whereas the recovery of developed pressure worsened with the prolongation of the ischemic period (95.1+/-4.2%, 84.3+/-1. 2%, 52.8+/-13.7%, and 16.9+/-6.4% of preischemic level). The kinetics of [Na+]i recovery during reperfusion was analyzed by the fitting of a monoexponential function. When the hearts were reperfused with low-[Ca]o (0.15 mmol/L) solution, the time constants of the recovery (tau) after 15-minute (8.07+/-0.85 minutes, n=5) and 21-minute ischemia (6.44+/-0.90, n=5) were significantly extended, with better functional recovery (98.5+/-1.4% for 15-minute [P<0.05]; 98.0+/-1.0% for 21-minute [P<0.05]) compared with standard reperfusion ([Ca]o=2.0 mmol/L, tau=3.58+/-0.28 minutes for 15-minute [P<0.0001]; tau=3.02+/-0.20 for 21-minute [P<0.0001]). A selective inhibitor of Na+/Ca2+ exchanger also decelerated the [Na+]i recovery, which suggests that the recovery reflects the Na+/Ca2+ exchange activity. In contrast, high-[Ca]o reperfusion (5 mmol/L) accelerated the [Na+]i recovery after 9-minute ischemia (tau=2.48+/-0.11 minute, n=5 [P<0.0001]) and 15-minute ischemia (tau=2.10+/-0.07, n=6 [P<0. 05]), but functional recovery deteriorated only in the hearts with 15-minute ischemia (29.8+/-9.4% [P<0.05]). [Na+]i recovery after 27-minute ischemia was incomplete and decelerated by low-[Ca]o reperfusion, with limited improvement of functional recovery (42. 5+/-7.9%, n=5 [P<0.05]). These results indicate that intracellular Na+ accumulation during ischemia is the substrate for reperfusion injury and that the [Na+]i kinetics during reperfusion, which is coupled with Ca2+ influx, also determines the degree of injury.
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