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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 49, 894-902, Copyright © 1990 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
H Yokoyama, JS Julian, J Vinten-Johansen, WE Johnston, TD Smith, DS McGee and AR Cordell
The positive inotropism expected with correction of postischemic
hypocalcemia might be counterbalanced by potential aggravation of
reperfusion injury, in particular by calcium overload. We evaluated the
effect of normalizing blood calcium concentration ([Ca2+]) on postischemic
left ventricular systolic and diastolic mechanics using oxygen consumption
and indices derived from pressure-diameter relations. In 10 open-chest dogs
on cardiopulmonary bypass, the hearts underwent 30 minutes of normothermic
global ischemia followed by one hour of multidose hypothermic (4 degrees
C), hypocalcemic (0.3 mmol/L) blood cardioplegia. After reperfusion,
systemic [Ca2+] had decreased to 70% of control (p = 0.017). The left
ventricular inotropic state was significantly depressed from baseline
(control) values, but was restored to baseline levels by resumption of
normocalcemia after one hour of reperfusion. Chamber stiffness increased by
308% (p = 0.006) after hypocalcemic reperfusion but decreased significantly
after [Ca2+] correction. Recovery of left ventricular performance with
[Ca2+] correction did not augment myocardial oxygen consumption from the
postischemic uncorrected state (5.0 +/- 0.3 mL O2/min/100 g versus 5.3 +/-
0.3 mL O2/min/100 g). We conclude that normalizing [Ca2+] after blood
cardioplegia improves postischemic left ventricular performance without
adversely affecting compliance or oxygen consumption.
ARTICLES
Postischemic [Ca2+] repletion improves cardiac performance without altering oxygen demands
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC 27103.
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