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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 81, 264-273, Copyright © 1981 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
RN Jones, DE Attarian, WD Currie, CO Olsen, RC Hill, JD Sink and AS Wechsler
High-energy phosphate content and mitochondrial function were analyzed at
the initiation and completion of ischemic contracture in dog hearts exposed
to normothermic ischemia while on cardiopulmonary bypass. Contracture
initiation and completion were detected by a balloon catheter placed within
the left ventricle. In seven dogs, inner and outer layers of the myocardium
were assayed for adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and creatine phosphate (CP).
ATP and CP content in these two layers were compared prior to ischemia and
at contracture initiation and completion. Inner layer ATP levels were 23.88
+/- 0.73 (mean +/- SM) mu moles/gm dry weight prior to ischemia, 5.14 +/-
0.49 at initiation, and 0.73 +/- 0.2 at completion. Inner layer CP content
was 41.29 +/- 0.87 prior to ischemia, 3.49 +/- 0.34 at initiation, and 4.06
+/- 0.48 at completion. Mitochondrial respiratory control indices (RCI)
were assayed in a second group of seven dogs prior to ischemia, at
contracture initiation, and at contracture completion and were,
respectively, 11.5 +/- 1.18, 3.1 +/- 0.43 and 1.76 +/- 0.29 (alpha
ketoglutarate as substrate). Despite the specific degrees of metabolic
deterioration associated with the events of contracture, ischemic time
required to develop contracture initiation and completion was variable,
ranging from 29.5 to 72 minutes for initiation and 60.25 to 101 minutes for
completion. A third group of five dogs had biopsy specimens taken for ATP
at fixed ischemic time intervals, and at 45 minutes of ischemia they were
found to have greater ranges in ATP values than the ranges associated with
contracture initiation. In contrast to ischemic time, the physiological
events of ischemic contracture are reliable predictors of the degree of
metabolic injury in the intact dog heart exposed to normothermic ischemic
arrest during cardiopulmonary bypass.
ARTICLES
Metabolic deterioration during global ischemia as a function of time in the intact normal dog heart
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