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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 92, 414-424, Copyright © 1986 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
FL Rosenfeldt, M Rabinov, P Little and G Campbell
The aim of this study was to document the relationship between coronary
pressure during reperfusion and myocardial recovery after hypothermic
cardioplegia. Isolated canine hearts perfused by a support dog were
subjected to 2 hours of cardioplegia at 20 degrees C. Three hearts were
reperfused at each of the following pressures: 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, and 150
mm Hg. The reperfusion period lasted 30 minutes, with the pressure being
raised gradually from zero to the test level over the first 2 minutes, then
being held constant until the end of the period. The results showed that
the normal dog heart after 2 hours of hypothermic cardioplegia is tolerant
to a wide range of coronary pressures during reperfusion. Hearts reperfused
at pressures between 40 and 100 mm Hg had similar values for coronary blood
flow, coronary sinus oxygen saturation, myocardial oxygen consumption,
lactate flux, contractility, and myocardial adenosine triphosphate content.
If coronary reperfusion pressure was 20 mm Hg, [corrected] myocardial
rewarming was delayed, myocardial oxygen consumption was decreased, and
myocardial ischemia was manifested by marked lactate efflux, high
myocardial lactate concentration, and depletion of adenosine triphosphate.
If pressure was 150 mm Hg, coronary flow was excessive. To place these
results in the context of coronary artery disease, we measured reperfusion
pressure in coronary arteries distal to a stenosis in 10 patients studied
at the time of coronary bypass grafting. In 13 arteries with major
stenoses, distal mean coronary pressure averaged 31 mm Hg while the
simultaneously measured mean aortic or radial artery pressure averaged 66
mm Hg. Thus the average gradient across the stenoses was 35 mm Hg (range 15
to 60 mm Hg). We concluded that in normal hearts without ischemic damage,
reperfusion can be conducted satisfactorily at mean coronary pressures from
40 to 100 mm Hg. In setting the tolerable limits for reperfusion pressure
in patients with severe coronary artery disease, one should make allowance
for pressure gradients of up to 60 mm Hg between the aorta and the distal
coronary artery.
ARTICLES
The relationship between coronary pressure during reperfusion and myocardial recovery after hypothermic cardioplegia [published erratum appears in J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1987 Apr;93(4):559]
This article has been cited by other articles:
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J. C. Bopassa, D. Vandroux, M. Ovize, and R. Ferrera Controlled reperfusion after hypothermic heart preservation inhibits mitochondrial permeability transition-pore opening and enhances functional recovery Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, November 1, 2006; 291(5): H2265 - H2271. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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