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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 92, 247-254, Copyright © 1986 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
H Otani, RM Engelman, RH Breyer, JA Rousou, S Lemeshow and DK Das
Cardioprotective effects of phospholipase inhibitor, mepacrine, on ischemic
reperfused myocardium were investigated in the isolated in situ pig heart
preparation, which was subjected to 120 minutes of regional ischemia, with
the final 60 minutes having superimposed global cardioplegic arrest
followed by 60 minutes of reperfusion. Mepacrine (0.05 mmol/L) was
administered before ischemia into the perfusion circuit in 15 of 29
experiments. Significant depletion of myocardial phospholipids occurred in
nontreated animals during 60 minutes of reperfusion. Mepacrine prevented
the reperfusion-induced phospholipid degradation. Further, the level of
high-energy phosphate compounds was higher during ischemia and reperfusion
in the mepacrine-treated hearts. Left ventricular developed pressure,
maximum rate of rise of left ventricular pressure, and left ventricular
end-diastolic pressure were measured under isovolumic conditions to assess
cardiac contractility and compliance. During incubation with mepacrine,
before ischemia, left ventricular developed pressure and maximum rate of
rise of left ventricular pressure decreased to 45% and 51% of baseline
values, respectively. This initial decline was improved to 65% and 70% in
mepacrine-treated animals during the early period of regional ischemia. In
the nontreated control heart, a progressive decline in contractility was
observed with ischemia such that no significant difference was apparent in
the two groups. Reperfusion resulted in a further deterioration of global
cardiac performance in both mepacrine-treated and control animals. Although
pretreatment with mepacrine did not improve contractility, myocardial
oxygen consumption, coronary flow, and cardiac compliance significantly
improved. These results suggest that myocardial injury may develop during
reperfusion after temporary ischemia. Mepacrine inhibits such injury by
acting as a phospholipase inhibitor, but it also behaves as a negative
inotropic agent in ischemic reperfused myocardium.
ARTICLES
Mepacrine, a phospholipase inhibitor. A potential tool for modifying myocardial reperfusion injury
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