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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 104, 1572-1581, Copyright © 1992 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
Y Toshima, H Kohno, K Matsuzaki, A Mitani, H Mayumi, H Yasui and K Tokunaga
The following hypotheses were tested using an isolated perfused working rat
heart model: (1) Collins' solution for cold storage of the heart is harmful
for the heart during reperfusion; (2) a "reverse" of the intracellular-type
Collins' solution with an extracellular-type cardioplegic solution before
reperfusion is able to prevent this disadvantage of Collins' solution. The
following two major groups (I and II) and five subgroups (-a to -e) in each
group were prepared. In group I (reversed group); the hearts were initially
stored in Collins' solution but were reversed by a 1-minute flush with
cardioplegic solution followed by storage in cardioplegic solution for the
last 1 to 180 minutes of the total 3-hour storage, that is, groups I-a
(reversed for 1 minute), I-b (10 minutes), I-c (30 minutes), I-d (90
minutes), and I-e (180 minutes). In group II (nonreversed control group);
the hearts were stored in Collins' solution throughout 3 hours and were
also divided into five subgroups of groups II-a, II-b, II-c, II-d, and II-e
in which only a 1-minute flush with Collins' solution was performed at the
point corresponding to group I. The coronary flow in any of group II showed
a marked decrease during the early reperfusion period. In group I, however,
the coronary flow increased significantly in proportion to the duration of
the reversing phase. The recovery of the aortic flow and the cardiac output
in group I showed a bell-shaped pattern in relation to the duration of the
reversing phase, reaching their peak values when reversed for 30 minutes
(group I-c). The prolonged reverse (180 minutes) resulted in a
deterioration of functional recovery associated with a poorer preservation
of high- energy phosphates and a larger enzyme leakage. These results
suggest that the beneficial effects of intracellular-type Collins' solution
for cold storage of the heart were further improved by reversing Collins'
solution with the extracellular-type cardioplegic solution for the last 30
minutes of the 3-hour cold storage because the disadvantageous
vasoconstriction due to Collins' solution during reperfusion was
successfully prevented by the replacement of intravascular and
extravascular Collins' solution with cardioplegic solution before the
reperfusion.
ARTICLES
Collins' solution for cold storage of the heart for transplantation must be reversed with cardioplegic solution before reperfusion. A functional and metabolic study in the rat heart
Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan.
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