Relation between left ventricular global and regional function and extent of myocardial ischemia in the canine heart |
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Authors: | M Akaishi R M Schneider R J Mercier F F Naccarella J B Agarwal R H Helfant W S Weintraub |
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Affiliation: | From the Mid-Atlantic Heart and Vascular Institute, Presbyterian-University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and The School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. |
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Abstract: | To develop a quantitative relation between the overall severity of acute ischemia and left ventricular global and regional function, two minor axis internal diameters and myocardial wall thickness were determined using ultrasonic crystals in 10 open chest dogs with carotid-left anterior descending artery cannulation. The overall extent of ischemia produced by graded stenosis of the cannulation system was estimated by total myocardial blood flow deficit, calculated using radioactive microspheres and a balloon-reservoir perfusion technique permitting precise separation of ischemic from nonischemic tissue. Although cardiac output and left ventricular stroke work were maintained through chamber enlargement until total myocardial blood flow deficit was about 10%, ejection indexes of left ventricular function decreased progressively with increasing ischemia and correlated inversely with total myocardial blood flow deficit (r = -0.55 to -0.73). Ejection indexes of left ventricular global function correlated directly with regional function in the ischemic zone (r = 0.67 to 0.83), although global function decreased at a far slower rate than regional contraction during progressive coronary stenosis with an ischemic region comprising about 25% of total left ventricular weight. During myocardial ischemia, regional dysfunction resulted in progressive global contractile dysfunction; left ventricular hemodynamic status was maintained until ischemia was severe. |
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Keywords: | Address for reprints: Ricky M. Schneider MD The Mid-Atlantic Heart and Vascular Institute Presbyterian-University of Pennsylvania Medical Center 51 North 39th Street Philadelphia Pennsylvania 19104. |
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