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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 55, 395-400, Copyright © 1993 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
MB Mitchell, CB Winter, CR Locke-Winter, A Banerjee and AH Harken
Efforts to minimize the deleterious effects of intraoperative myocardial
ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury have been primarily directed at
optimizing cardioplegic solutions and altering reperfusion conditions.
Classically, myocardial I/R has been associated with cardiac mechanical
dysfunction ("stunning"). Recently, we reported an alpha 1-adrenergic
receptor-mediated mechanism of paradoxical myocardial protection against
I/R insult induced by a prior episode of transient ischemia, a phenomenon
known as "ischemic preconditioning." Myocardial stunning resulting from
transient ischemia has previously been associated with ischemic
preconditioning, prompting intuitively negative bias against the clinical
application of this phenomenon. The purpose of this study was to determine
whether transient ischemia of insufficient duration to cause prolonged
mechanical dysfunction (stunning) can induce favorable cardiac
preconditioning. Isolated- perfused rat hearts were allowed to equilibrate
for 8 minutes and were then subjected to either 2 minutes of global,
normothermic transient ischemia or 2 minutes of 50 mumol/L phenylephrine
infusion. A stabilization period of perfusion lasting 10 minutes after the
termination of transient ischemia or phenylephrine infusion was followed by
a standard I/R challenge (20 minutes of global, normothermic ischemia; 40
minutes of reperfusion). Ventricular function (measured as developed
pressure in millimeters of mercury) recovered rapidly after transient
ischemia such that no impairment was present before the subsequent standard
I/R challenge. Phenylephrine treatment was associated with no residual
inotropy before I/R challenge. Control hearts were subjected only to the
standard I/R challenge after an initial 20-minute equilibration period.
After reperfusion control hearts exhibited 54.4% recovery of initial left
ventricular developed pressure. Transient ischemia- and
phenylephrine-preconditioned hearts recovered 84.4% (p < 0.01) and 82.4%
(p < 0.01), respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Cardiac preconditioning does not require myocardial stunning
Department of Surgery, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver 80262.
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