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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 52, 939-948, Copyright © 1991 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
J Vinten-Johansen, JS Julian, H Yokoyama, WE Johnston, TD Smith, DS McGee and AR Cordell
The role of oxygen (O2) in blood cardioplegia (BCP) remains controversial.
On the one hand, O2 reduces ischemic injury between BCP infusions by
maintaining energy production through oxidative pathways. On the other
hand, O2 carried by blood may not be released to the tissue at 4 degrees C
or potentially provides substrate for deleterious O2 radical species. This
study tests the hypothesis that O2 is a critical component in myocardial
protection afforded by BCP. In 17 anesthetized dogs, left ventricular
performance was measured by left ventricular end-systolic pressure-volume
relations using the position of the end-systolic pressure-volume relation
quantitated by the left ventricular midrange volume intercept at 100 mm Hg
(V100) to describe performance. After 30 minutes of global normothermic
ischemia, hearts were protected with multidose 4 degrees C BCP for 1 hour
of arrest. Oxygen content in BCP was adjusted to 1.1 +/- 0.2 vol% (n = 7;
desaturated BCP group), 4.3 +/- 0.5 vol% (n = 5; intermediate oxygenated
BCP group), or 10.2 +/- 0.6 vol% (n = 5; saturated BCP group) using a
membrane oxygenator interposed in the BCP circuit and aerated with an
appropriate mixture of O2, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide. After 1 hour of 37
degrees C reperfusion, 3 of the 7 dogs in the desaturated BCP group failed
to generate sufficient cardiac output to discontinue bypass. In the
remaining 4 dogs, severe left ventricular depression caused a rightward
shift in V100 from 17 +/- 4 to 47 +/- 9 mL (p = 0.02). With intermediate
BCP, all hearts were weaned from bypass with marginal left ventricular
depression (V100, 20 +/- 5 versus 46 +/- 16 mL; p = 0.10). In contrast,
hearts protected with saturated BCP showed no significant increase in V100
(13 +/- 4 versus 24 +/- 13 mL; p = 0.23). We conclude that O2 in BCP is
critical to its myocardial protective properties.
ARTICLES
Efficacy of myocardial protection with hypothermic blood cardioplegia depends on oxygen
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27103.
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