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1.
The intention of this study was to determine whether glucose is beneficial in a cardioplegic solution when the end products of metabolism produced during the ischemic period are intermittently removed. The experimental model used was the isolated working rat heart, with a 3-hour hypothermic 10 degrees C cardioplegic arrest period. Cardioplegic solutions tested were the St. Thomas' Hospital No. 2 and a modified Krebs-Henseleit cardioplegic solution. Glucose (11 mmol/L) was beneficial when multidose cardioplegia was administered every 30 minutes. Including glucose in Krebs-Henseleit cardioplegic solution improved postischemic recovery of aortic output from 57.0% +/- 1.8% to 65.8% +/- 2.2%; p less than 0.025. The addition of glucose to St. Thomas' Hospital No. 2 cardioplegic solution improved aortic output from 74.6% +/- 1.9% to 87.4% +/- 1.9%; p less than 0.005. Furthermore, a dose-response curve showed that a glucose concentration of 20 mmol/L gave no better recovery than 0 mmol/L, and glucose in St. Thomas Hospital No. 2 cardioplegic solution was beneficial only in the range of 7 to 11 mmol/L. In addition, we showed that multidose cardioplegia was beneficial independent of glucose. Multidose St. Thomas' Hospital No. 2 cardioplegia, as opposed to single-dose cardioplegia, improved aortic output recovery from 57.4% +/- 5.2% to 74.6% +/- 1.9%; p less than 0.025, and with St. Thomas' Hospital No. 2 cardioplegic solution plus glucose (11 mmol/L) aortic output recovery improved from 65.9% +/- 2.9% to 87.4% +/- 1.9%; p less than 0.005. Hence, at least in this screening model, the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution should contain glucose in the range of 7 mmol/L to 11 mmol/L, provided multidose cardioplegia is given. We cautiously suggest extrapolation to the human heart, on the basis of supporting clinical arguments that appear general enough to apply to both rat and human metabolisms.  相似文献   

2.
Myocardial high-energy phosphate and glucose-6-phosphate levels were determined in the in vivo pig heart model during ischemic arrest and reperfusion to determine the effectiveness of potassium cardioplegia in myocardial protection. Thirty-five pigs were divided into six experimental groups consisting of 2-hour normothermic arrest, 2-hour hypothemic arrest, 2-hour normothermic cardioplegic arrest, and 1-, 2-, and 3-hour hypothermic cardioplegic arrest. Myocardial biopsies from the left ventricle were obtained prior to arrest, every 30 minutes during the arrest interval, and at 30 and 60 minutes of reperfusion. The measurement of adenosine triphosphate and creatine phosphate showed that (1) cardioplegic arrest requires hypothermia to preserve high-energy phosphate levels in myocardial tissue; (2) hypothermia, while not completely protective alone, is more effective than potassium cardioplegia alone in providing myocardial preservation during 2-hour ischemic arrest; (3) the combination of potassium cardioplegia and hypothermia is additive in providing an effective means of maintaining myocardial high-energy phosphate stores during 1, 2, and 3 hours of ischemic arrest; (4) myocardial reperfusion does not allow a return to preischemic adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels after 2 hours of arrest, except following hypothermic cardioplegia; and (5) extension of the duration of ischemic arrest to 3 hours using hypothermic cardioplegia prevents recovery of high-energy phosphate stores to preischemic levels during reperfusion. Optimal preservation can be achieved during 2 hours of ischemic arrest by using hypothermic potassium cardioplegia. The effects of myocardial reperfusion, however, prevent full ATP and creatine phosphate (CP) recovery following 3 hours of arrest. No other technique studied was as effective in providing myocardial preservation.  相似文献   

3.
The potential for enhancing myocardial protection by adding high-energy phosphates to cardioplegic solutions was investigated in a rat heart model of cardiopulmonary bypass and ischemic arrest. Creatine phosphate (CP) was evaluated as an additive to the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution. Dose-response studies (CP 0 to 50 mmol/L) revealed 10.0 mmol/L as the optimal concentration which improved recovery of aortic flow and cardiac output after a 40 minute period of normothermic (37 degrees C) ischemic arrest from 21.2% +/- 5.4% and 32.8% +/- 4.6% in the CP-free control group to 82.5% +/- 3.7% and 82.6% +/- 4.2% (p less than 0.001), respectively. Creatine kinase (CK) leakage was reduced by 68.7% (p less than 0.001) in the CP group. With hypothermic (20 degrees C) ischemia (240 minutes) and multidose (every 30 minutes) cardioplegia, recoveries of aortic flow and cardiac output were improved from 33.1% +/- 8.4% and 42.2% +/- 7.7% in the CP-free control group to 77.9% +/- 4.2% and 79.6% +/- 4.3% (p less than 0.001), respectively, in the drug group. In addition to improving function and decreasing CK release, CP reduced reperfusion arrhythmias, significantly decreasing the time between cross-clamp removal and return of regular rhythm and also completely obviating the need for electrical defibrillation. 51Chromium-ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (51Cr-EDTA), an extracellular space marker, was used to study the disappearance of CP from the cardioplegic solution during its stasis in the heart. Upon reperfusion, two thirds of the infused dose appeared unchanged in the coronary effluent; the remainder was either degraded or accumulated by the myocardium. Despite its alleged inability to enter the myocardial cell, exogenous CP exerts potent protective and antiarrhythmic effects when added to the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution. Although the mechanism of action remains to be elucidated, it may involve binding or uptake of the drug.  相似文献   

4.
Current methods of cardioplegic delivery may delay the recovery of right ventricular metabolism and function. To evaluate right and left ventricular metabolism, we performed biopsies in 37 patients undergoing elective coronary bypass operation with aortic root blood cardioplegia. Right ventricular temperatures were warmer than left ventricular temperatures during cardioplegic arrest (right ventricle: 16.8 degrees +/- 3.8 degrees C, left ventricle: 14.3 degrees +/- 3.7 degrees C, p = 0.02). Adenosine triphosphate concentrations were lower in the right ventricle than in the left ventricle before cardioplegic arrest (right ventricle: 13.8 +/- 7.8 mmol/kg, left ventricle: 21.5 +/- 8.7 mmol/kg, p = 0.02). After reperfusion, right ventricular adenosine triphosphate concentrations fell to low levels (10 +/- 6 mmol/kg). Postoperative left and right ventricular high energy phosphate concentrations (the sum of adenosine triphosphate and creatine phosphate levels) correlated inversely with myocardial temperatures during cardioplegia (r = -0.29, p = 0.048). Aortic root cardioplegia did not cool the right ventricle as well as it did the left ventricle. The lower preoperative high energy phosphate concentrations may have increased the susceptibility of the right ventricle to ischemic injury. Alternative methods of myocardial preservation may improve right ventricular cooling and protection.  相似文献   

5.
The concentration of calcium (1.2 mmol/L) in clinical St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution was chosen several years ago after dose-response studies in the normothermic isolated heart. However, recent studies with creatine phosphate in St. Thomas' Hospital solution demonstrated that additional myocardial protection during hypothermia resulted principally from its calcium-lowering effect in the solution. The isolated working rat heart model was therefore used to establish the optimal calcium concentration in St. Thomas' Hospital solution during lengthy hypothermic ischemia (20 degrees C, 300 minutes). The calcium content of standard St. Thomas' Hospital solution was varied from 0.0 to 1.5 mmol/L in eight treatment groups (n = 6 for each group). During ischemia, hearts were exposed to multidose cardioplegia (3 minutes every 30 minutes). Postischemic recovery of function was expressed as a percentage of preischemic control values. Release of creatine kinase and the time to return of sinus rhythm during the reperfusion period were also measured. These dose-response studies during hypothermic ischemia revealed a broad range of acceptable calcium concentrations (0.3 to 0.9 mmol/L), which appear optimal in St. Thomas' Hospital solution at 0.6 mmol/L. This concentration improved the postischemic recovery of aortic flow from 22.0% +/- 5.9% with control St. Thomas' Hospital solution (calcium concentration 1.2 mmol/L) to 86.0% +/- 4.0% (p less than 0.001). Other indices of functional recovery showed similar dramatic results. Creatine kinase release was reduced 84% (p less than 0.01) in the optimal calcium group. Postischemic reperfusion arrhythmias were diminished with the loser calcium concentration, with a significant decrease in the time between initial reperfusion until the return of sinus rhythm. In contrast, acalcemic St. Thomas' Hospital solution precipitated the calcium paradox with massive enzyme release and no functional recovery. Unlike prior published calcium dose-response studies at normothermia, these results demonstrate that the optimal calcium concentration during clinically relevant hypothermic ischemia is considerably lower than that of normal serum ionized calcium (1.2 mmol/L) and appears ideal at 0.6 mmol/L to realize even greater cardioprotective and antiarrhythmic effects with St. Thomas' Hospital solution.  相似文献   

6.
Adenosine is a potential cardioplegic agent by virtue of its specific inhibitory properties on nodal tissue. We tested the hypothesis that adenosine could be more effective than potassium in inducing rapid cardiac arrest and enhancing postischemic hemodynamic recovery. Isolated rat hearts were perfused with Krebs-Henseleit buffer or cardioplegic solutions to determine the time to cardiac arrest and the high-energy phosphate levels at the end of cardioplegia. Cardioplegic solutions contained adenosine 10 mmol/L, potassium 20 mmol/L, or adenosine 10 mmol/L + potassium 20 mmol/L and were infused at a rate of 2 ml/min for 3 minutes at 10 degrees C. Both time taken and total number of beats to cardiac arrest during 3 minutes of cardioplegia were reduced by adenosine 10 mmol/L and adenosine 10 mmol/L + potassium 20 mmol/L when compared with potassium 20 mmol/L alone (p less than 0.001). Tissue phosphocreatine was conserved by adenosine 10 mmol/L when compared with potassium 20 mmol/L, being 7.1 +/- 0.2 (mumol/gm wet weight (n = 7) and 6.0 +/- 0.3 mumol/gm wet weight (n = 5), respectively (p less than 0.05). Postischemic hemodynamic recovery was tested in isolated working rat hearts. After initial cardiac arrest, the cardioplegic solution was removed with Krebs-Henseleit buffer at a rate of 2 ml/min for 3 minutes at 10 degrees C, and thereafter total ischemia was maintained for 30 or 90 minutes at 10 degrees C before reperfusion. Adenosine 10 mmol/L enhanced recovery of aortic output when compared with potassium 20 mmol/L or adenosine 10 mmol/L + potassium 20 mmol/L, the percentage recovery after 30 minutes of ischemia being 103.0% +/- 4.4% (n = 6), 89.0% +/- 5.8% (n = 6), and 86.6% +/- 4.3% (n = 6), respectively (p less than 0.05 for comparison between adenosine 10 mmol/L and potassium 20 mmol/L). Thus adenosine cardioplegia caused rapid cardiac arrest and improved postischemic recovery when compared with potassium cardioplegia and with a combination of these two agents.  相似文献   

7.
The myocardial protective effects of crystalloid, blood, and Fluosol-DA-20% cardioplegia were compared by subjecting hypertrophied pig hearts to 3 hours of hypothermic (10 degrees to 15 degrees C), hyperkalemic (20 mEq/L) cardioplegic arrest and 1 hour of normothermic reperfusion. Left ventricular hypertrophy was created in piglets by banding of the ascending aorta, with increase of the left ventricular weight-body weight ratio from 3.01 +/- 0.2 gm/kg (control adult pigs) to 5.50 +/- 0.2 gm/kg (p less than 0.001). An in vivo isolated heart preparation was established in 39 grown banded pigs, which were divided into three groups to receive aerated crystalloid (oxygen tension 141 +/- 4 mm Hg), oxygenated blood (oxygen tension 584 +/- 41 mm Hg), or oxygenated Fluosol-DA-20% (oxygen tension 586 +/- 25 mm Hg) cardioplegic solutions. The use of crystalloid cardioplegia was associated with the following: a low cardioplegia-coronary sinus oxygen content difference (0.6 +/- 0.1 vol%), progressive depletion of myocardial creatine phosphate and adenosine triphosphate during cardioplegic arrest, minimal recovery of developed pressure (16% +/- 8%) and its first derivative (12% +/- 7%), and marked structural deterioration during reperfusion. Enhanced oxygen uptake during cardioplegic infusions was observed with blood cardioplegia (5.0 +/- 0.3 vol%), along with excellent preservation of high-energy phosphate stores and significantly improved postischemic left ventricular performance (developed pressure, 54% +/- 4%; first derivative of left ventricular pressure, 50% +/- 5%). The best results were obtained with Fluosol-DA-20% cardioplegia. This produced a high cardioplegia-coronary sinus oxygen content difference (5.8 +/- 0.1 vol%), effectively sustained myocardial creatine phosphate and adenosine triphosphate concentrations during the extended interval of arrest, and ensured the greatest hemodynamic recovery (developed pressure, 81% +/- 6%, first derivative of left ventricular pressure, 80% +/- 10%) and the least adverse morphologic alterations during reperfusion. It is concluded that oxygenated Fluosol-DA-20% cardioplegia is superior to oxygenated blood and especially aerated crystalloid cardioplegia in protecting the hypertrophied pig myocardium during prolonged aortic clamping.  相似文献   

8.
Although few surgeons dispute the benefits of high-potassium crystalloid cardioplegia, objective comparison of the efficacy of various formulations is difficult in clinical practice. We compared four commonly used cardioplegic solutions in the isolated rat heart (N = 6 for each solution) subjected to 180 minutes of hypothermic (20 degrees C) ischemic arrest with multidose cardioplegia (3 minutes every half-hour). The clinical solutions studied were St. Thomas' Hospital solution, Tyers' solution, lactated Ringer's solution with added potassium, and a balanced saline solution with glucose and potassium. Postischemic recovery of function was expressed as a percentage of preischemic control values. Release of creatine kinase during reperfusion was measured as an additional index of protection. St. Thomas' Hospital solution provided almost complete recovery of all indexes of cardiac function following ischemia including 88.1 +/- 1.6% recovery of aortic flow, compared with poor recovery for the Tyers', lactated Ringer's, and balanced saline solutions (20.6 +/- 6.5%, 12.5 +/- 6.4%, and 9.6 +/- 4.2%, respectively) (p less than 0.001). Spontaneous defibrillation was rapid (less than 1 minute) and complete (100%) in all hearts in the St. Thomas' Hospital solution group, but much less satisfactory with the other formulations. Finally, St. Thomas' Hospital solution had a low postischemic level of creatine kinase leakage, contrasting with significantly higher enzyme release in the other solutions tested (p less than 0.001). Although differences in composition are subtle, all potassium crystalloid cardioplegic solutions are not alike in the myocardial protection they provide. Comparative studies under controlled conditions are important to define which formulation is superior for clinical application.  相似文献   

9.
Clinical application of hypothermic pharmacologic cardioplegia in pediatric cardiac surgery is less than satisfactory, despite its well known benefits in adults. Protection of the ischemic immature rabbit heart with hypothermia alone is better than with hypothermic St. Thomas' II cardioplegic solution. Control of cellular calcium is a critical component of cardioplegic protection. We determined whether the existing calcium content of St. Thomas' II solution (1.2 mmol/L) is responsible for suboptimal protection of the ischemic immature rabbit heart. Modified hypothermic St. Thomas' II solutions (calcium content, 0 to 2.4 mmol/L) were compared with hypothermic Krebs bicarbonate buffer in protecting ischemic immature (7- to 10-day-old) hearts. Hearts (n = 6 per group) underwent aerobic "working" perfusion with Krebs buffer, and cardiac function was measured. The hearts were then arrested with a 3-minute infusion of either cold (14 degrees C) Krebs buffer (1.8 mmol calcium/L) as hypothermia alone or cold St. Thomas' II solution before 6 hours of hypothermic (14 degrees C) global ischemia. Hearts were reperfused, and postischemic enzyme leakage and recovery of function were measured. A bell-shaped dose-response profile for calcium was observed for recovery of aortic flow but not for creatine kinase leakage, with improved protection at lower calcium concentrations. Optimal myocardial protection occurred at a calcium content of 0.3 mmol/L, which was better than with hypothermia alone and standard St. Thomas' II solution. We conclude that the existing calcium content of St. Thomas' II solution is responsible, in part, for its damaging effect on the ischemic immature rabbit heart.  相似文献   

10.
Benefits of glucose and oxygen in multidose cold cardioplegia.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We tested the effects of glucose and oxygen in cardioplegic solutions on myocardial protection in the isolated perfused working rat heart. Recovery from 2 hours' hypothermic (8 degrees C) cardioplegic arrest was examined in 93 hearts. Cardioplegic solution, which was delivered every 15 minutes, was supplemented with glucose 28 mmol/L as a substrate or sucrose 28 mmol/L as a nonmetabolizable osmotic control; it was equilibrated with either 98% oxygen or 98% nitrogen, both with 2% carbon dioxide. Four combinations of hyperkalemic cardioplegic solution were studied: nitrogen-sucrose, nitrogen-glucose, oxygen-sucrose, and oxygen-glucose. During hypothermic arrest, oxygenation of cardioplegic solution greatly reduced myocardial lactate production and prevented ischemic contracture as indicated by coronary vascular resistance. Glucose increased lactate production modestly but significantly only when the cardioplegic solution was nitrogenated. Although end-arrest myocardial adenosine triphosphate and creatine phosphate were greatly increased by oxygenation of cardioplegic solution (p less than 0.005), we could not detect improved preservation of these high-energy phosphates by glucose. Averaged over reperfusion, percent recovery of cardiac output for the nitrogen-sucrose, nitrogen-glucose, oxygen-sucrose, and oxygen-glucose solutions was 32.3% +/- 6.1%, 45.9% +/- 4.6%, 44.5% +/- 4.6%, and 62.2% +/- 4.5%, respectively. Oxygenation of the glucose solution or addition of glucose to the oxygenated solution significantly improved recovery of cardiac output. The benefits of glucose and oxygen were additive, so that the oxygen-glucose cardioplegic solution provided the best functional recovery. We conclude that the addition of glucose to the fully oxygenated multidose cold cardioplegic solution improves functional recovery without increasing lactate production during arrest.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: Depolarizing potassium cardioplegia has been increasingly linked to left ventricular dysfunction, arrhythmia, and microvascular damage. We tested a new polarizing normokalemic cardioplegic solution employing adenosine and lidocaine as the arresting, protecting, and preserving cardioprotective combination. Adenosine hyperpolarizes the myocyte by A1 receptor activation, and lidocaine blocks the sodium fast channels. METHODS: Isolated perfused rat hearts were switched from the working mode to the Langendorff (nonworking) mode and arrested for 30 minutes, 2 hours, or 4 hours with 200 micromol/L adenosine and 500 micromol/L lidocaine in Krebs-Henseleit buffer (10 mmol/L glucose, pH 7.7, at 37 degrees C) or modified St Thomas' Hospital solution no. 2, both delivered at 70 mm Hg and 37 degrees C (arrest temperature 22 degrees C to 35 degrees C). RESULTS: Adenosine and lidocaine hearts achieved faster mechanical arrest in (25 +/- 2 seconds, n = 23) compared with St Thomas' Hospital solution hearts (70 +/- 5 seconds, n = 24; P=.001). After 30 minutes of arrest, both groups developed comparable aortic flow at approximately 5 minutes of reperfusion. After 2 and 4 hours of arrest (cardioplegic solution delivered every 20 minutes for 2 minutes at 37 degrees C), only 50% (4 of 8) and 14% (1 of 7) of St Thomas' Hospital solution hearts recovered aortic flow, respectively. All adenosine and lidocaine hearts arrested for 2 hours (n = 7) and 4 hours (n = 9) recovered 70% to 80% of their prearrest aortic flows. Similarly, heart rate, systolic pressures, and rate-pressure products recovered to 85% to 100% and coronary flows recovered to 70% to 80% of prearrest values. Coronary vascular resistance during delivery of cardioplegic solution was significantly lower (P <.05) after 2 and 4 hours in hearts arrested with adenosine and lidocaine cardioplegic solution compared with hearts arrested with St Thomas' Hospital solution. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that adenosine and lidocaine polarizing cardioplegic solution confers superior cardiac protection during arrest and recovery compared with hyperkalemic depolarizing St Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of this study was to test for metabolic differences in the response of hypertrophic and normal hearts to hypothermic cardioplegia. Hypertrophic dog hearts and normal control hearts were subjected to 6 hours of hypothermic cardioplegia with the St. Thomas' Hospital solution. Levels before arrest of subepicardial and subendocardial adenosine triphosphate, creatine phosphate, and lactate in eight hypertrophic hearts were the same as those levels in 12 normal hearts. In hypertrophic hearts, but not in normal hearts, the induction of arrest was slow and was associated with an 11% increase in adenosine triphosphate levels, a 59% decrease in creatine phosphate levels, and a 12-fold increase in lactate levels. Seven hypertrophic hearts and eight normal hearts were studied during 6 hours of arrest and showed no further differences in metabolic response. Reducing the myocardial temperature from 20 degrees C to 12 degrees C slowed the rate of depletion of adenosine triphosphate and the rate of accumulation of lactate in both groups. We conclude that in the nonfailing, severely hypertrophic heart, levels before arrest of high-energy phosphates and lactate are normal, but that marked biochemical changes may occur if the induction of arrest is prolonged because of underdosing with cardioplegic solution. Cooling from 20 degrees C to 12 degrees C improves myocardial preservation in both hypertrophic and normal hearts.  相似文献   

13.
This study was designed to test the effect of glucose and a formulation enriched with branched chain amino acids as additives to oxygenated crystalloid cardioplegic solution in the ischemic heart. Energy-depleted isolated working rat hearts were subjected to 68 minutes of normothermic global ischemia during which oxygenated cardioplegic solution was used to protect them. The hearts were then reperfused in the nonworking mode for 10 minutes and for a further 30 minutes in the working mode. The hearts were randomly divided into three groups, in which various oxygenated cardioplegic solutions were perfused. Group 1 (control) was subjected to modified St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution and groups 2 and 3 to the same solution with the addition of glucose (11.1 mmol/L) and glucose (11.1 mmol/L) and branched chain amino acids, respectively. Recovery of aortic flow, coronary flow, cardiac output, aortic pressure, adenosine triphosphate, creatine phosphate, and oxygen consumption was significantly better in group 2 than in group 1. In addition, recovery of aortic flow, coronary flow, cardiac output, aortic pressure, stroke volume, minute work, adenosine triphosphate, and creatine phosphate was found to be significantly enhanced in group 3. Release of adenine catabolites and lactic dehydrogenase from these hearts during postischemic reperfusion was significantly decreased. Thus, during global ischemia in the energy-depleted heart, the presence of glucose and branched chain amino acids in oxygenated crystalloid cardioplegic solution enhanced myocardial protection.  相似文献   

14.
Metabolic enhancement of myocardial preservation during cardioplegic arrest   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
An experimental study was undertaken to evaluate the relative efficacy of oxygenated versus unoxygenated cardioplegic solutions and to determine if the addition of certain metabolically active substrates to cardioplegic solutions had any effect on myocardial preservation. Sixty-one pigs were divided into seven groups of animals (5 to 15 animals per group). The impact of different cardioplegic vehicles, i.e., crystalloid versus the oxygen-carrying vehicles, blood and Fluosol-DA, on preservation of high-energy phosphates (adenosine triphosphate and creatine phosphate) was examined in the first three animal groups. The influence of Krebs cycle intermediates, i.e., glutamate, malate, succinate and fumarate, on adenosine triphosphate and creatine phosphate preservation was evaluated in the other four animal groups. All hearts underwent 120 minutes of hypothermic cardioplegic arrest at 15 degrees C followed by 60 minutes of normothermic reperfusion. Higher adenosine triphosphate and creatine phosphate levels were maintained during arrest when oxygenated solutions were used as the cardioplegic vehicle and when any of the four intermediates were added to the crystalloid cardioplegic solution, especially succinate and fumarate. During reperfusion, however, adenosine triphosphate levels were uniformly lower than control whereas creatine phosphate levels rose to either control levels or higher in all groups. No significant intergroup difference could be identified during reperfusion. These findings lead to the conclusion that the presence of either oxygen or certain Krebs cycle intermediates enhances the protective effect of hyperkalemic hypothermic cardioplegia on high-energy phosphates during the arrest period only. This enhancement is not maintained during the reperfusion period.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Warm continuous blood cardioplegia provides excellent protection, but must be interrupted by ischemic intervals to aid visualization. We hypothesized that (1) as ischemia is prolonged, the reduced metabolic rate offered by cooling gives the advantage to hypothermic cardioplegia; and (2) prior cardioplegia mitigates the deleterious effects of normothermic ischemia. METHODS: Isolated cross-perfused canine hearts underwent cardioplegic arrest followed by 45 minutes of global ischemia at 10 degrees C or 37 degrees C, or 45 minutes of normothermic ischemia without prior cardioplegia. Left ventricular function was measured at baseline and during 2 hours of recovery. Metabolism was continuously evaluated by phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy. RESULTS: Adenosine triphosphate was 71% +/- 4%, 71% +/- 7%, and 38% +/- 5% of baseline at 30 minutes, and 71% +/- 4%, 48% +/- 5%, and 39% +/- 6% at 42 minutes of ischemia in the cold ischemia, warm ischemia, and normothermic ischemia without prior cardioplegia groups, respectively. Left ventricular systolic function, left ventricular relaxation, and high-energy phosphate levels recovered fully after cold cardioplegia and ischemia. Prior cardioplegia delayed the decline in intracellular pH during normothermic ischemia initially by 9 minutes, and better preserved left ventricular relaxation during recovery, but did not ameliorate the severe postischemic impairment of left ventricular systolic function, marked adenosine triphosphate depletion, and creatine phosphate increase. Left ventricular distensibility decreased in all groups. CONCLUSIONS: When cardioplegia is followed by prolonged ischemia, better protection is provided by hypothermia than by normothermia. Prior cardioplegia confers little advantage on recovery after prolonged normothermic ischemia but delays initial ischemic metabolic deterioration, which would contribute to the safety of brief interruptions of warm cardioplegia.  相似文献   

16.
This study tests the hypothesis that multidose, hypocalcemic aspartate/glutamate-enriched blood cardioplegia provides safe and effective protection during prolonged aortic clamping of immature hearts. Of 17 puppies (6 to 8 weeks of age, 3 to 5 kg) placed on vented cardiopulmonary bypass, five were subjected to 60 minutes of 37 degrees C global ischemia without cardioplegic protection and seven underwent 120 minutes of aortic clamping with 4 degrees C multidose aspartate/glutamate-enriched blood cardioplegia ([Ca++] = 0.2 mmol/L), preceded and followed by 37 degrees C blood cardioplegic induction and reperfusion. Five puppies underwent blood cardioplegic perfusion for 10 minutes without intervening ischemia to assess the effect of the cardioplegic solution and the delivery techniques. Left ventricular performance was assessed 30 minutes after bypass was discontinued (Starling function curves). Hearts were studied for high-energy phosphates and tissue amino acids. One hour of normothermic ischemia resulted in profound functional depression, with peak stroke work index only 43% of control (0.7 +/- 0.1 versus 1.7 +/- 0.2 gm x m/kg, p less than 0.05). There was 70% depletion of adenosine triphosphate (7.6 +/- 1 versus control 20.3 +/- 1 mumol/gm dry weight, p less than 0.05) and 75% glutamate loss (6.6 +/- 1 versus control 26.4 +/- 3 mumol/gm, p less than 0.05). In contrast, after 2 hours of aortic clamping with multidose blood cardioplegia preceded and followed by 37 degrees C blood cardioplegia, there was complete recovery of left ventricular function (peak stroke work index 1.6 +/- 0.2 gm x m/kg) and maintenance of adenosine triphosphates, glutamate, and aspartate levels at or above control levels adenosine triphosphate 18 +/- 2 mumol/gm, aspartate 21 +/- 1 versus control 2 mumol/gm, and glutamate 25.4 +/- 2 mumol/gm). Puppy hearts receiving blood cardioplegic perfusion without ischemia had complete recovery of control stroke work index. We conclude that methods of myocardial protection used in adults, with amino acid-enriched, reduced-calcium blood cardioplegia, can be applied safely to the neonatal heart and allow for complete functional and metabolic recovery after prolonged aortic clamping.  相似文献   

17.
Inadequate myocardial preservation continues to be an important cause of postoperative morbidity and mortality after pediatric cardiac operations. To investigate methods of improving preservation in neonatal myocardium, we compared three cardioplegic solutions with topical hypothermia during 120 minutes of ischemic arrest in isolated, blood-perfused, neonatal rabbit hearts. Topical hypothermia (15 degrees C) without cardioplegia resulted in 71% +/- 5% recovery of preischemic contractile function. A high potassium (30 mEq/L) cardioplegic solution resulted in a 76% +/- 6% recovery of function, not significantly different from that obtained with hypothermia alone. In contrast, the St. Thomas' Hospital and H?pital Lariboisiere cardioplegic solutions resulted in recoveries of 89% +/- 6% and 88% +/- 7%, respectively, both of which were significantly greater (p less than 0.001) than recoveries obtained with the high potassium solution or hypothermia alone. Thus the cardioplegic solutions used at St. Thomas' Hospital and H?pital Lariboisiere provided excellent protection during 2 hours of hypothermic ischemic arrest in neonatal rabbit hearts and resulted in functional recovery superior to that achieved with hypothermia alone or with the high potassium cardioplegic solution.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of a short period of ventricular fibrillation on myocardial high energy phosphates were assessed in two groups of rats. Group 1 underwent hypothermic crystalloid cardioplegia infusion and aortic cross-clamping. In Group 2, cardioplegia and cross-clamping were preceded by ten seconds of induced ventricular fibrillation. In rat hearts that had undergone ventricular fibrillation, adenosine triphosphate levels averaged only 70% (p less than .0001) and creatine phosphate levels averaged only 60% (p less than .0005) of levels measured following standard cardioplegic arrest without ventricular fibrillation. These findings are of potential importance in both routine cardiac surgical procedures and in organ procurement.  相似文献   

19.
Cardioplegia and slow calcium-channel blockers. Studies with verapamil   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The ability of dl-verapamil to enhance myocardial protection when given before, during, or after myocardial ischemia was assessed with the use of an isolated working rat heart model of cardiopulmonary bypass and ischemic cardiac arrest. Under conditions of normothermic ischemic arrest (30 minutes at 37 degrees C), the addition of verapamil enhanced the protective properties of the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution. Optimal protection was observed with verapamil concentrations of 0.5 mg/L (1.09 mumol/L) of cardioplegic solution. Under these conditions, postischemic enzyme leakage was reduced by 32.2% and the postischemic recovery of aortic flow was improved by 18.7%. Despite the additional protection at normothermia, the drug at several concentrations appeared unable to improve functional recovery after an extended period of hypothermic arrest (150 minutes at 20 degrees C), although under these conditions its inclusion in the cardioplegic solution could substantially reduce enzyme leakage. In other studies, the ability of various doses of verapamil alone as a substitute for the cardioplegic solution was examined. At the optimal dose (again 0.5 mg/L), and under normothermic conditions, verapamil alone was a good protection against ischemic injury, although this protection did not match that afforded by the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution. In similar studies under hypothermic conditions, the drug failed to afford tissue protection, perhaps indicating some common modality between hypothermia and verapamil-induced protection. Pretreatment with verapamil (0.1 mg/L) prior to ischemia offered moderate additional protection, but its use during reperfusion failed to enhance overall recovery.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of oxygenation (100% oxygen) of the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solutions No. 1 (MacCarthy) and No.2 (Plegisol, Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, Ill.) was examined in the isolated working rat heart subjected to long periods (3 hours for studies with solution No. 1 and 4 hours for studies with solution No. 2) of hypothermic (20 degrees C) ischemic arrest with multidose (every 30 minutes) cardioplegic infusion. At the aortic infusion point the oxygen tension of the oxygenated solutions (measured at 20 degrees C) was in the range of 320 to 560 mm Hg whereas that of the nonoxygenated solutions was less than 150 mm Hg. Twenty hearts (10 oxygenated and 10 nonoxygenated) were studied for each solution. The studies with solution No. 1 demonstrated that oxygenation led to a significant (p less than 0.05) reduction in the incidence of persistent ventricular fibrillation during postischemic reperfusion. Oxygenation of the cardioplegic solution also improved postischemic functional recovery so that the recovery of aortic flow was improved from 18.7% +/- 8.9% (of its preischemic control level) in the nonoxygenated group to 54.6% +/- 6.6% in the oxygenated group (p less than 0.025). Creatine kinase leakage was also significantly reduced from 27.5 +/- 4.8 to 9.9 +/- 0.6 IU/15 min/gm dry weight (p less than 0.005). Studies with solution No. 2 indicated that protection was better than with solution No. 1, even in the absence of oxygenation. A better degree of functional recovery was obtained after 4 hours of arrest with solution No. 2 than that obtained after only 3 hours of arrest with solution No. 1, and persistent ventricular ventricular fibrillation was never observed with solution No. 2. However, despite the superior performance with solution No. 2, further improvements could be obtained by oxygenation, with that time from the onset of reperfusion to the return of regular sinus rhythm being reduced from 55 +/- 8 to 35 +/- 2 seconds (p less than 0.01), postischemic recovery of aortic flow increasing from 59.8% +/- 7.4% to 85.7% +/- 2.5% (p less than 0.005), and creatine kinase leakage being reduced from 38.1 +/- 7.3 to 16.2 +/- 1.5 IU/15 min/gm dry weight (p less than 0.005). It is concluded that oxygenation of the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solutions improves their ability to protect the heart against long periods of ischemia and that this is manifested by improved postischemic electrical stability, functional recovery, and reduced creatine kinase leakage.  相似文献   

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