首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 467 毫秒
1.
In this study we tried to define the possible benefits of the oxygen-derived free radical scavengers after 3 hours of cold myocardial global ischemia, as required in the setting of cardiac transplantation. Twenty-one pig hearts were harvested after preservation with a cold cardioplegic solution (St. Thomas' Hospital solution) and topical cooling. Normothermic reperfusion with blood was achieved with a special heart-lung machine preparation, which allows the heart to beat in a working or nonworking mode. Twelve hearts served as control hearts (group I), and nine (group II) were subjected to superoxide dismutase and catalase. Superoxide dismutase was applied at a dose of 40 U/ml of cardioplegic solution and 1500 U/kg body weight with the start of reperfusion. Catalase was added to the cardioplegic solution in a dose of 100 U/kg and 3500 U/kg body weight with the start of reperfusion. After 15 minutes of retrograde reperfusion, both left ventricular developed pressure and its first derivative were significantly higher in group II (137 +/- 7.6 mm Hg, 2467 +/- 162 mm Hg/sec) than in group I (105 +/- 6 mm Hg, 1676 +/- 231 mm Hg/sec, p less than 0.05 for each). In addition, a considerably higher coronary blood flow was observed in group II throughout the 180-minute period of reperfusion (p = 0.047). We therefore conclude that the combined administration of superoxide dismutase and catalase during the initial period of cardioplegic arrest and during early reperfusion of donor hearts submitted to 3 hours of cold ischemia has a beneficial effect on myocardial performance.  相似文献   

2.
Myocardial protection achieved during 2 hours of ischemic arrest was evaluated in 45 isolated, blood perfused, neonatal (1 to 5 days) piglet hearts. Comparisons were made among five methods of myocardial protection: Group I, topical cooling; Group II, hyperosmolar (450 mOsm) low-calcium (0.5 mmol/L) crystalloid cardioplegia; Group III, St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegia; Group IV, cold blood cardioplegia with potassium (21 mmol/L), citrate-phosphate-dextrose (calcium level 0.6 mmol/L), and tromethamine; and Group V, cold blood cardioplegia with potassium alone (16 mmol/L) (calcium level 1.2 mmol/L). Hemodynamic recovery (percent of the preischemic stroke work) after 30 and 60 minutes of reperfusion was 82.9% and 86.7% in Group I, 35.7% (p less than 0.0001) and 43.7% (p less than 0.0001) in Group II, 76.1% and 77.7% in Group III, 67.4% (p less than 0.05) and 60.6% (p less than 0.05) in Group IV, and 110.7% and 100.6% in Group V. Conclusions: Topical cooling is an effective method of myocardial protection in the neonate. Cold blood cardioplegia with potassium alone and a normal calcium level provides optimal functional recovery. The improved protection obtained with both crystalloid and blood cardioplegia with normal calcium levels suggests an increased sensitivity of the neonatal heart to the calcium level of the cardioplegic solution.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The components of the University of Wisconsin solution have the potential to enhance and extend heart preservation. We have evaluated University of Wisconsin solution by comparing it with St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution in the isolated pig heart subjected to 8 hours of ischemia at 4 degrees C (n = 6 in each). The hearts were perfused ex vivo with enriched autologous blood for the control and the postpreservation assessments. Morphologic, metabolic, and functional evaluations were performed. Left and right ventricular function as assessed by the slope values of systolic and diastolic pressure-volume relationships of isovolumically contracting isolated heart was better preserved by University of Wisconsin solution (percent reduction: left ventricular systolic, 52.4% +/- 5.5% versus 17.7% +/- 6.7% [p less than 0.001]; right ventricular systolic, 125.6% +/- 46.4% versus 65.5% +/- 31.4% [p less than 0.05]; right ventricular diastolic, 112.3% +/- 48.7% versus 40.2% +/- 31.3% [p less than 0.02] after St. Thomas' Hospital and University of Wisconsin preservation, respectively). Postischemic recovery of left ventricular rate of rise of pressure and myocardial oxygen consumption were significantly improved after University of Wisconsin preservation (percent reduction, rate of rise of pressure: St. Thomas' Hospital 39.3% +/- 8.1%; University of Wisconsin 18.1% +/- 4.6%; percent reduction, myocardial oxygen consumption St. Thomas' Hospital 55.1% +/- 6.9%, University of Wisconsin 24.8% +/- 6.7%; p less than 0.001). Microvascular functional integrity as assessed by coronary vascular resistance was well maintained throughout the postischemic period and was similar to the preischemic control value in the University of Wisconsin group. By contrast, a significant increase was found at the beginning of postpreservation reperfusion, with a progressive rise thereafter in the St. Thomas' Hospital group (p less than 0.001). Preservation of myocardial adenosine triphosphate was improved and energy charge was unchanged after 8 hours of ischemia and reperfusion in the University of Wisconsin-preserved hearts compared with the St. Thomas' Hospital-preserved hearts (p less than 0.01). Electron microscopic examination revealed substantially better preservation of the contractile apparatus after preservation with University of Wisconsin solution. Myocytes from hearts receiving University of Wisconsin solution, unlike those given St. Thomas' Hospital solution, showed relaxed myofibrils with prominent I-bands. We conclude that University of Wisconsin solution has the potential to improve the preservation of the heart and possibly prolong the ischemic period in clinical cardiac transplantation.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
We used the isolated perfused working rat heart to investigate the effects of transient hypocalcemic reperfusion after cardioplegic arrest with the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution and 25 minutes of global normothermic (37 degrees C) ischemia. Hearts were reperfused (Langendorff mode) transiently (20 minutes) with solutions containing various concentrations of calcium; this was followed by 30 minutes of reperfusion with standard (1.4 mmol/L, the physiologic concentration) calcium buffer (10 minutes in the Langendorff mode and 20 minutes in the working mode). Recovery of cardiac output in control hearts (calcium concentration 1.4 mmol/L throughout) was 51.7% +/- 4.6%; in hearts transiently reperfused with hypocalcemic buffer (0.25, 0.5, 0.75, or 1.0 mmol/L) the recoveries of cardiac output were 49.3% +/- 6.4%, 52.2% +/- 7.2%, 58.7% +/- 3.2%, and 47.2 +/- 4.7%, respectively (all not significant), whereas recovery was only 14.7% +/- 2.8% (p less than 0.05) in hearts transiently reperfused with calcium 0.1 mmol/L. Creatine kinase leakage was significantly (p less than 0.05) greater in the group reperfused with calcium 0.1 mmol/L, but it did not vary significantly between the other groups. Tissue high-energy phosphate content was similar and in the normal range in all groups except for the group reperfused with calcium 0.1 mmol/L. In further experiments, the duration of hypocalcemic (0.5 mmol/L) reperfusion was varied (0, 5, 10, 15, 20, or 30 minutes). No significant differences in recovery of cardiac output were observed (58.2% +/- 5.0%, 52.3% +/- 5.7%, 52.0% +/- 8.2%, 61.2% +/- 5.0%, 62.2% +/- 4.3%, and 66.2% +/- 3.2%, respectively). In additional studies, the standard calcium concentration (1.4 mmol/L) used before and after ischemia was replaced by hypercalcemic solution (2.5 mmol/L). Despite this, transient (10 minutes) hypocalcemic (0.5 mmol/L) reperfusion did not improve recovery. Finally, studies were undertaken with a longer duration of ischemia (40 minutes), and although recovery of cardiac output in the hypocalcemic group (0.5 mmol/L for 10 minutes) tended to be higher than in the control group (29.7% +/- 4.8% versus 18.5% +/- 4.9%, respectively), statistical significance was not achieved. We conclude that in these studies transient hypocalcemic reperfusion did not afford any additional protection over and above that afforded by cardioplegia alone.  相似文献   

7.
Reperfusion of warm blood cardioplegic solution is useful in minimizing reperfusion damage after ischemia. This study tests the hypothesis that overzealous administration of blood cardioplegic solution at reperfusion counteracts these benefits and can lead to a prevalence of depressed ventricular performance and mortality similar to that seen after normal blood reperfusion. Thirty-one dogs underwent 45 minutes of 37 degrees C global ischemia on vented bypass. Six received normal blood reperfusion and 25 were reperfused with a warm aspartate/glutamate-enriched blood cardioplegic solution; of these, eight received high-dose (3600 +/- 600 ml) and 17 received limited-dose (1180 +/- 120 ml) blood cardioplegic reperfusion over 10 to 20 minutes. High-dose blood cardioplegic perfusion (5100 +/- 200 ml) without prior ischemia was tested in an additional five dogs. High-dose blood cardioplegia without preceding ischemia did not alter ventricular function (peak stroke work index 96% of control). After ischemia, normal blood reperfusion (no cardioplegia) resulted in marked left ventricular dysfunction (peak stroke work index 36% of control, p less than 0.05 versus control) and a 33% mortality rate (2/6 died). High-dose cardioplegic reperfusion yielded marginal recovery of stroke work index (40% of control, p less than 0.05 versus control) and a 25% mortality rate (2/8 died). In contrast, limited-dose reperfusion of blood cardioplegic solution allowed 100% survival (17/17) and restored stroke work index to 90% of control (1.3 versus 1.45 gm.m/kg). We conclude that reperfusion damage can be avoided by initial reoxygenation with limited doses of substrate-enriched blood cardioplegic solution. Conversely, high-dose reperfusion of blood cardioplegic solution offsets this benefit, reduces recovery substantially, and may be lethal.  相似文献   

8.
Controversy surrounds the reported beneficial effects of crystalloid cardioplegic solutions in the immature myocardium. In the present study we have investigated the efficacy of four clinical cardioplegic solutions in the immature myocardium to determine (1) whether cardioplegic protection could be demonstrated and, if so, (2) the relative efficacy of the four solutions. Isolated, working hearts (n = 6 per group) from neonatal rabbits (aged 5 to 8 days) were perfused aerobically (37 degrees C) for 20 minutes before a 2-minute infusion of one of four cardioplegic solutions: The St. Thomas' Hospital No. 2, Tyers, Bretschneider, and Roe solutions. Hearts were then rendered globally ischemic for 50 minutes at 37 degrees C before reperfusion for 15 minutes in the Langendorff mode and 20 minutes in the working mode. The postischemic recovery of cardiac function and leakage of creatine kinase were compared with results in noncardioplegic control hearts. Good protection was observed with the St. Thomas' Hospital and Tyers solutions: The postischemic recovery of cardiac output was increased from 21.2% +/- 12.7% in the cardioplegia-free group to 79.4% +/- 6.2% and 72.9% +/- 4.4%, respectively, in the St. Thomas' Hospital and Tyers groups (p less than 0.01). In contrast, no protection was observed with either the Bretschneider or Rose solutions: Cardiac output recovered to 31.7% +/- 10.3% and 5.1% +/- 3.2%, respectively, in these groups. Postischemic creatine kinase leakage was 72.4 +/- 12.3 and 92.1 +/- 18.6 IU/15 min/gm dry weight in the St. Thomas' Hospital and Tyers groups compared with 125.6 +/- 28.6 IU/15 min/gm dry weight in control hearts (p = no significant difference). In the Bretschneider group, creatine kinase leakage increased to 836.9 +/- 176.8 IU/15 min/gm dry weight (p less than 0.01 versus noncardioplegic control hearts), and with the Roe solution the value was 269.0 +/- 93.0 IU/15 min/gm dry weight (p = no significant difference). In conclusion, cardioplegic protection can be achieved in the immature rabbit myocardium with both St. Thomas' Hospital and Tyers solutions, but acalcemic solutions such as Bretschneider and Roe solutions (which may be effective in the adult heart) increased damage in this preparation. The reported lack of cardioplegic efficacy in the immature myocardium may therefore reflect the choice of cardioplegic solution rather than a greater vulnerability to injury in the neonatal heart.  相似文献   

9.
Effects of two cardioplegic solutions on coronary artery and myocardium were experimentally investigated in three types of preparations. In the isolated perfused guinea pig heart, infusion of Glucose-Insulin-Potassium (GIK) solution (37 degrees C) caused contraction of coronary artery, whereas the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution (37 degrees C) produced vasodilation. At the end of 30 minutes reperfusion after continuous infusion of cardioplegic solution, the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution produced a greater recovery of cardiac function than GIK solution. In the isolated pig coronary artery, vasoconstriction caused by high potassium content was diminished by addition of magnesium in concentration dependent manner. In the electrophysiological examination, the membrane potential of the guinea pig papillary muscle was recorded by means of conventional glass microelectrodes. Though GIK solution produced greater depolarization of resting membrane potential than the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution, effects of the two different cardioplegic solution was not so different after reperfusion of Tyrode solution. The St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution resulted in greater recovery of contracting activity after reperfusion than GIK solution. These data suggest that GIK solution causes coronary vasoconstriction and has deleterious effects on myocardium and that the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution has a vasodilating action and produced a greater myocardial protection than GIK solution.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
We compared the ability of blood and crystalloid cardioplegia to protect the myocardium during prolonged arrest. Twelve dogs underwent 180 minutes of continuous arrest. Group I (six dogs) received 750 ml of blood cardioplegic solution (potassium chloride 30 mEq/L) initially and every 30 minutes. Group II (six dogs) received an identical amount of crystalloid cardioplegic solution (potassium chloride 30 mEq, methylprednisolone 1 gm, and 50% dextrose in water 16 ml/L of electrolyte solution). Temperature was 10 degrees C and pH 8.0 in both groups. Studies of myocardial biochemistry, physiology, and ultrastructure were completed before arrest and 30 minutes after normothermic reperfusion. Biopsy specimens for determination of adenosine triphosphate were obtained before, during, and after the arrest interval. Regional myocardial blood flow, total coronary blood flow, and myocardial oxygen consumption were statistically unchanged in Group I (p greater than 0.05). Total coronary blood flow rose 196% +/- 49% in Group II (p less than 0.005), and left ventricular endocardial/epicardial flow ratio fell significantly in this group from 1.51 +/- 0.18 to 0.8 +/- 0.09, p less than 0.01 (mean +/- standard error of the mean. The rise in myocardial oxygen consumption was not significant in this group (34% +/- 36%, p greater than 0.05). Ventricular function and compliance were statistically unchanged in both groups. In Group II, adenosine triphosphate fell 18% +/- 3.4% (p less than 0.005) after 30 minutes of reperfusion; it was unchanged in Group I. Ultrastructural appearance in both groups correlated with these changes. We conclude that blood cardioplegia offers several distinct advantages over crystalloid cardioplegia during prolonged arrest.  相似文献   

12.
Retrograde administration of cardioplegic solution via the right atrium with continuous cooling of the right ventricular cavity (right atrial perfusion cooling) was assessed for its protective effect in 12 dogs with occlusion of the right coronary artery subjected to global ischemia for 60 minutes. After an initial administration of 4 degrees C crystalloid cardioplegic solution by antegrade aortic perfusion, myocardial protection was established either by right atrial perfusion cooling (group I; n = 6) or by antegrade aortic perfusion alone (group II; n = 6). The right ventricular temperature was approximately 15 degrees C in group I and 20 degrees C in group II. After ischemia for 60 minutes, the adenosine triphosphate content of the right ventricular free wall was significantly higher in group I than in group II (24.4 +/- 1.45 versus 13.8 +/- 2.34 mumol/gm dry weight, p less than 0.05). The percent recovery of right ventricular contractility, which was evaluated by end-systolic pressure-volume relationships, was significantly better in group I at each reperfusion period (30 minutes: 130.0% +/- 9.6% versus 86.1% +/- 11.8%, p less than 0.05; 60 minutes: 159.6% +/- 12.9% versus 96.5% +/- 20.1%, p less than 0.05). Postischemic right ventricular stiffness (reciprocal value of compliance) increased in group II compared with group I, although the difference was not statistically significant. There were no major differences in percent recovery of the left ventricular end-systolic pressure-volume relationships between the two groups. The evidence suggests that the right atrial perfusion cooling method produces excellent right ventricular protection.  相似文献   

13.
We have investigated the reported ability of aspartate to enhance greatly the cardioprotective properties of the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution after prolonged hypothermic storage. Rat hearts (n = 8 per group) were excised and subjected to immediate arrest with St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution (2 minutes at 4 degrees C) with or without addition of monosodium aspartate (20 mmol/L). The hearts were then immersed in the same solution for 8 hours (4 degrees C) before heterotopic transplantation into the abdomen of homozygous rats and reperfusion in vivo for 24 hours. The hearts were then excised and perfused in the Langendorff mode (20 minutes). Addition of aspartate to St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution gave a small but significant improvement in left ventricular developed pressure, which recovered to 82 +/- 3 mm Hg compared with 70 +/- 2 mm Hg in control hearts (p less than 0.05). However, coronary flow and high-energy phosphate content were similar in both groups. In subsequent experiments hearts (n = 8 per group) were excised, arrested (2 minutes at 4 degrees C) with St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution containing a 0, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, or 50 mmol/L concentration of aspartate, stored for 8 hours at 4 degrees C, and then reperfused for 35 minutes. A bell-shaped dose-response curve was obtained, with maximum recovery in the 20 mmol/L aspartate group (cardiac output, 48 +/- 5 ml/min versus 32 +/- 5 ml/min in the aspartate-free control group; p less than 0.05). However, additional experiments showed that a comparable improvement could be achieved simply by increasing the sodium concentration of St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution by 20 mmol/L. Similarly, if sodium aspartate (20 mmol/L) was added and the sodium content of the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution reduced by 20 mmol/L, no significant protection was observed when recovery was compared with that of unmodified St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution alone. In still further studies, hearts (n = 8 per group) were perfused in the working mode at either high (greater than 80 ml/min) or low (less than 50 ml/min) left atrial filling rates. Under these conditions, if functional recovery was expressed as a percentage of preischemic function, artifactually high recoveries could be obtained in the low-filling-rate group. In conclusion, assessment of the protective properties of organic additives to cardioplegic solutions requires careful consideration of (1) the consequences of coincident changes in ionic composition and (2) the characteristics of the model used for assessment.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of supplementing oxygenated St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution No. 2 with L-aspartate and/or D-glucose for the long-term preservation of excised rat hearts were determined with isolated working heart preparations. Left ventricular function was assessed at 37 degrees C with a crystalloid perfusate, before cardioplegic arrest and after 20 hours of low-flow perfusion (1.5 ml/min) with continuing arrest at 4 degrees C, and after this period, again at 37 degrees C with a crystalloid perfusate. Four groups (n = 8/group) of hearts were studied with four cardioplegic solutions: St. Thomas' Hospital solution alone, St. Thomas' Hospital solution with aspartate 20 mmol/L, St. Thomas' Hospital solution with glucose 20 mmol/L, and St. Thomas' Hospital solution plus both aspartate and glucose (20 mmol/L each). The addition of glucose to St. Thomas' Hospital solution made no significant difference in the recovery of aortic flow rates (17.7% +/- 8.6% and 21.6% +/- 7.8% of prearrest values), but when aspartate or aspartate and glucose were present, hearts showed significant improvements (89.8% +/- 5.2% and 85.0% +/- 6.2%, respectively). These improvements were associated with a reduction in the decline of myocardial high-energy phosphates during reperfusion, a reduction in cellular uptake of Na+ and Ca++, and a reduction in ultrastructural damage. These results indicate that low-flow perfusion with St. Thomas' Hospital solution plus aspartate can considerably extend the duration of safe storage of explanted hearts.  相似文献   

15.
This study tests whether initial asanguineous washout of potentially toxic substances that accumulate during ischemia improves recovery produced by blood cardioplegic reperfusion and evaluates the role of plasma versus whole blood cardioplegia. METHODS: Twenty-four dogs underwent 2 hours of occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery and 20 minutes of blood cardioplegic reperfusion on total vented bypass. In 13 dogs, a 5-minute infusion of either a crystalloid (n = 7) or plasma (n = 6) cardioplegic solution (containing the same pH, calcium potassium, and osmolarity as blood cardioplegia) was given immediately before reoxygenation with blood cardioplegia. Regional oxygen uptake and coronary vascular resistance were measured during controlled reperfusion, and segmental shortening (ultrasonic crystals), tissue water content, and histochemical damage (triphenyltetrazolium chloride stain) were assessed 1 hour after bypass was discontinued. RESULTS: Asanguineous cardioplegic washout before reoxygenation with blood cardioplegic solution resulted in a progressive (+42%) increase in coronary vascular resistances (from 123 to 176 units, p less than 0.05) and low oxygen utilization during 20 minutes of blood cardioplegic reperfusion (29 ml/100 gm, p less than 0.05); coronary vascular resistance remained low throughout blood cardioplegic reperfusion without washout (from 109 to 98 units), and oxygen utilization was 54 ml/100 gm (p less than 0.05). Neither plasma nor crystalloid washout restored substantial regional systolic shortening (3% systolic shortening versus 73% systolic shortening with blood cardioplegia), and asanguineous washout caused more myocardial edema (81.1% +/- 80.9% versus 79.5% water content, p less than 0.05) and produced extensive transmural triphenyltetrazolium chloride damage (48% +/- 41% versus 8% nonstaining in area at risk, p less than 0.05) than initial blood cardioplegic reperfusion. CONCLUSION: Asanguineous cardioplegic washout before blood cardioplegic reperfusion limits oxygen utilization during subsequent controlled reperfusion, restricts early recovery of systolic shortening, allows more myocardial edema, and produces extensive histochemical damage, which may be avoided by initial reoxygenation with blood cardioplegia. The red blood cells appear more important than the plasma components of blood cardioplegia.  相似文献   

16.
Cardiac transplantation remains constrained by poor graft tolerance of prolonged cold ischemia. University of Wisconsin solution has remarkably extended ischemic preservation in pancreas, kidney, and liver transplantation. To assess its efficacy in cardiac preservation, modified University of Wisconsin solution flush and storage were tested against St. Thomas' cardioplegia flush and normal saline solution storage after six hours of ischemia at 0 degrees C in 46 isolated rat hearts. After ischemia, groups were compared before and after reperfusion. After ischemia but before reperfusion, University of Wisconsin solution hearts had significantly less tissue water (3.8%), superior tissue sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium profiles, and elevated adenosine and inosine levels, and tended toward better histological preservation. After reperfusion, University of Wisconsin solution more effectively preserved left ventricular compliance (75% versus 35% of baseline), developed pressure (71% versus 45% of baseline), histological integrity, and tissue potassium and calcium profiles than St. Thomas' solution. The University of Wisconsin solution provided superior preservation of systolic and diastolic ventricular function, tissue histology, tissue water, and tissue electrolytes than did St. Thomas' cardioplegia and normal saline solution storage in this experimental model, and might result in improved graft tolerance of ischemia in clinical cardiac transplantation.  相似文献   

17.
This study was designed to test the hypothesis that asanguineous reperfusion with a standard crystalloid cardioplegic solution results in improved myocardial salvage after a period of global ischemia. Four groups of 6 dogs each were placed on cardiopulmonary bypass. Control group A (work only) performed two hours of controlled work by contracting against a saline-filled left intraventricular balloon. Control group B (ischemia only) underwent 45 minutes of global normothermic ischemia before simple blood reperfusion while supported on bypass. Groups C and D were subjected to ischemia and reperfusion as in group B, followed by controlled work stress as in group A. Group D, however, received 500 mL of St. Thomas' Hospital solution immediately before blood reperfusion. Morphological analysis showed no significant injury in groups A and B, whereas group C had 11.4% +/- 2.4% necrosis of heart mass versus 2.5% +/- 1.1% in group D (p less than 0.001). Biochemical data from left ventricular biopsies showed no significant differences between groups B, C, and D. Functional analyses showed deterioration of diastolic compliance in group C (p less than 0.05), although a significant difference in systolic functional indexes could not be detected. Myocardial protection and salvage was improved by initial reperfusion with an asanguineous cardioplegic solution versus reperfusion with blood alone.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Hypothermic total circulatory arrest for repair of congenital heart lesions in neonates requires a period of rapid core cooling on cardiopulmonary bypass during which the myocardium is also exposed to hypothermic perfusion. Myocardial hypothermia in the nonarrested state results in an increase in contractility due to elevation of intracellular calcium levels. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that rapid myocardial cooling before cardioplegic ischemic arrest results in damage, with impaired recovery during reperfusion. Two groups of 10 rabbit hearts were perfused on an isolated Langendorff apparatus. Group N (normothermia) was perfused at 37 degrees C before 2 hours of cardioplegic ischemic arrest at 10 degrees C. Group C (cooling) was perfused at 15 degrees C in the unarrested state for 20 minutes before the same cardioplegic arrest conditions as group N. Left ventricular isovolumic pressure measurements, biochemical measurements from right ventricular biopsy specimens, and ventricular necrosis as defined by tetrazolium staining were used to compare the groups at 30 and 60 minutes of normothermic reperfusion. Developed pressure at a constant volume was preserved in group N at 90.7 +/- 4.5 mm Hg versus 76.9 +/- 6.3 in group C after reperfusion (p less than 0.05). Diastolic compliance showed significant deterioration in group C, with marked elevation of diastolic pressure during reperfusion (group N = 6.8 +/- 2.5 mm Hg versus group C = 38.9 +/- 6.1 after reperfusion; p less than 0.001). Adenosine triphosphate levels were significantly higher in group N both at end-ischemia and after reperfusion versus group C (group N = 17.0 +/- 1.1 nmol/mg protein versus group C = 7.7 +/- 1.0 after reperfusion; p less than 0.001). Group N had 0.4% +/- 0.4% necrosis of ventricular mass versus 19.3% +/- 2.2% with prearrest cooling in group C (p less than 0.0001). These results indicate that, when combined with cardioplegic ischemic arrest, rapid myocardial cooling in the unarrested state results in significant damage. The mechanism may be related to the cytosolic calcium loading effect of hypothermia that is not relieved during the subsequent period of cardioplegic arrest. Although hypothermia is an essential component to ischemic preservation, rapid cooling contracture can adversely influence cardioplegic myocardial protection.  相似文献   

20.
The myocardial protection afforded by GIK solution, widely used as cardioplegic solution in this country, was compared with that provided by St. Thomas solution or oxygenated St. Thomas solution. Eighteen isolated heart-lung preparations of dogs were made and their hearts were subjected to 3 hours cold (4 degrees C) cardioplegic arrest. GIK group hearts (n = 6) received 20 ml/kg of GIK solution at the time of aortic cross-clamp perfused through the aortic root and were subsequently given 10 ml/kg of GIK solution every 30 minutes. St. Thomas group hearts (n = 6) and oxygenated St. Thomas group hearts (n = 6) were treated identically except that cardioplegic solution were St. Thomas solution or fully oxygenated one. Four hearts of GIK group showed ventricular fibrillation immediately after reperfusion that required DC countershock. Temporary A-V block was recognized in two hearts. In the other two groups, however, neither ventricular fibrillation nor A-V block was found. Heart rate, coronary flow, aortic flow and LVSW were measured before arrest and after 60 minutes of reperfusion (mean aortic pressure 70 mmHg, left atrial pressure 4 mmHg). Post reperfusion % recovery rates (post-reperfusion/before arrest) of heart rate, coronary flow, aortic flow and LVSW (mean value +/- standard deviation) were 93.4 +/- 10.32%, 104.6 +/- 24.91%, 18.8 +/- 8.54%, 32.6 +/- 6.12% respectively for GIK group, 81.4 +/- 6.50%, 125.9 +/- 15.23%, 35.4 +/- 9.91%, 56.3 +/- 12.90% for St. Thomas group and 83.1 +/- 8.40%, 121.6 +/- 16.92%, 47.0 +/- 7.89%, 69.1 +/- 9.71% for oxygenated St. Thomas group. St. Thomas and oxygenated St. Thomas groups revealed significantly (p less than 0.05, p less than 0.01 respectively) more excellent functional preservation than GIK group. Intramyocardial pH was also measured by use of glass needle pH electrode punctured into the anterior interventricular septum. Preischemic intramyocardial pH (at 37 degrees C) was 7.49 +/- 0.106 in GIK group, 7.48 +/- 0.113 in St. Thomas group and 7.43 +/- 0.114 in oxygenated St. Thomas group. During 3 hours of cardioplegic arrest, intramyocardial pH (at 4 degrees C) decreased to 6.84 +/- 0.101 in GIK group, 7.03 +/- 0.088 in St. Thomas group and 7.23 +/- 0.239 in oxygenated St. Thomas group, which was significantly higher than GIK group (p less than 0.01). Therefore oxygenated St. Thomas solution was found to maintain more favorable energy supply to ischemic myocardium. These results clearly evidenced that St. Thomas and oxygenated St. Thomas solutions would provide more effective myocardial protection during ischemic arrest than GIK solution.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号