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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2003;125:1022-1029
© 2003 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery
Cardiopulmonary Support and Physiology |
From the Service de Chirurgie Cardiaque, Centre Cardiologique du Nord, Saint-Denis, France; Département d'Anesthésie-Réanimation, Service de Biochimie et de Biologie Moléculaire, CR Claude Bernard "Pathologie Expérimentale et Communications Cellulaires," Institut Fédératif de Recherche, Hôpital Lariboisière, Paris, France.
Read at the Eighty-second Annual Meeting of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery, Washington, DC, May 5-8, 2002.
Received for publication May 29, 2002. Revisions requested July 8, 2002; revisions received July 22, 2002. Accepted for publication Aug 14, 2002. Address for reprints: Alexandre Mebazaa, MD, PhD (E-mail: mscorsin{at}hotmail.com), Département d'Anesthésie-Réanimation-SMUR, Hôpital Lariboisière, 2 rue Ambroise-Paré, 75475 Paris Cedex 10, France.
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Thus, the main objective of this study was to assess, in patients operated on for aortic valve replacement with hypertrophied left ventricles, whether esmolol can be as efficient as potassium in protecting the myocardium during continuous retrograde blood cardioplegia. Myocardial hypertrophy was chosen because of its widely known decreased tolerance to ischemia during cardiac surgery. To do so, we compared effects of esmolol and potassium on preoperative and postoperative hemodynamic and biologic parameters and on myocardial metabolic function, including myocardial oxygen, glucose, and lactate use and myocardial nitric oxide (NO) production during the aortic crossclamping period.
| Methods |
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In addition to aortic crossclamping, initial antegrade flow of cardioplegic solution was started in the aortic root through a line originating from the arterial part of the oxygenator, with potassium or esmolol diluted in normoxic blood (oxygen saturation of >97%, with PaO2 ranging from 90-120 mm Hg and blood flow of 0.3 L x min-1). Potassium (0.2 g x mL-1) was administered at a total dose of approximatively 1.2 g in the potassium group, whereas esmolol (50 mg x mL-1) was administered at a total dose of 250 to 300 mg in the esmolol group, both administered over 2 to 3 minutes in the cardioplega line. Although the heart was consistently arrested in the potassium group without apparent contraction, it remained beating in the esmolol group at a rate of less than 30 beats/min with minimal myocardial contraction during aortic crossclamping. For clarity, we will, however, use the term "cardioplegia" for both agents. After induction of cardioplegia in the potassium group or minimal myocardial contraction in the esmolol group (consistently <3 minutes for both solutions), antegrade perfusion was stopped and relayed by means of retrograde continuous myocardial perfusion through a self-inflating double-lumen balloon cannula (DLP, Grand Rapids, Mich) placed by means of a transright atrial blind cannulation of the coronary sinus. The myocardial perfusion flow rate was kept constant at approximately 0.25 L x min-1 to maintain a coronary sinus pressure of between 30 and 40 mm Hg. Cardioplegia was therefore maintained with a dose of 4 to 6 g x h-1 of potassium to obtain a final potassium concentration of 12 mmol x L-1 in the cardioplegia line in the potassium group. Minimal myocardial contraction in the esmolol group was maintained with a dose of 600 mg x h-1, which was reduced to 300 to 400 mg x h-1 if the heart rate decreased to less than 30 beats/min. Magnesium was also administered to all patients at a dose of 125 mL x h-1 of 10% MgSO4.
Measurements
Hemodynamic parameters
Transesophageal echocardiography was performed 1 day before and 5 days after the surgical procedure to assess LV ejection fraction. Penn-cube LV mass was measured, as previously described
17:
1.04 ([IVST + LVID + PWT]3 - LVID)3 - 13.6 g
where IVST is defined as interventricular septal thickness, LVID is defined as LV internal dimension, and PWT is defined as posterior wall thickness. All values are measured during end-diastole, and the results were then indexed to body surface area. After obtainment of general anesthesia and tracheal intubation, a Swan-Ganz catheter (Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, Calif) was introduced into the pulmonary artery to record baseline hemodynamics before sternotomy: mean pulmonary arterial pressure, cardiac index, and mixed pulmonary artery oxygen saturation. Data were also recorded 4 hours after the end of the operation. All measurements were made at a fraction of inspired oxygen of 0.5. The need for catecholamines after CPB was also recorded.
Metabolic parameters
Blood samples were taken to measure plasma lactate, troponin I, and creatinine levels before sternotomy and at 4 hours after the operation. The plasma troponin I level was also measured 24 hours after the operation. Furthermore, other blood samples were taken during CPB to assess the transmyocardial gradient of oxygen content indexed to body surface area (TMO2; see calculations below), and the transmyocardial gradient of plasma glucose, lactate (to assess whether myocardial blood perfusion was adequate), and nitrate (NO2/NO3, index of myocardial NO production). To do so, blood samples were simultaneously withdrawn upstream in the cardioplegia line and downstream of the myocardium in the left coronary ostium through a coronary balloon-tipped, angled soft cannula (Polystan A/S, Vaerløse, Denmark) to avoid any possible contamination with blood from the left ventricle. Blood samples were withdrawn 10 and 30 minutes after aortic crossclamping. Plasma nitrite and nitrate levels were measured by using the Griess method, as previously described.
18 In brief, nitrate present in the sample was reduced on nitrite by the enzyme nitrate reductase, and the total nitrite formed is measured on the basis of its absorbance at 550 nm.
Continuous antegrade blood cardioplegia
To assess whether differences in transmyocardial oxygen content and NO release between the esmolol and potassium groups could be related to the direction of cardioplegic blood flow rather than to a cardioplegic agent, we measured these parameters in 10 additional patients receiving cardioplegic solution through the antegrade route (potassium group, n = 5; esmolol group, n = 5). In brief, after induction of cardiac arrest, the aorta was opened, and the left and right coronary ostia were cannulated and continuously perfused through 2 coronary balloon-tipped, angled soft cannulas at a flow rate of 0.2 L x min-1. Doses of potassium and esmolol were identical to and had the same effects as those described above for retrograde perfusion. Measurements (oxygen content and NO concentration) were performed 10 and 30 minutes after aortic crossclamping in both the cardioplegia line and the self-inflating double-lumen balloon cannula inserted in the coronary sinus. Indeed, during antegrade cardioplegia, blood from the coronary sinus was considered downstream of the myocardium.
Calculations
The transmyocardial gradient for retrograde perfusion is defined as follows: Plasma concentration (or oxygen content) in the perfusion line - Plasma concentration (or oxygen content) in the left coronary ostium.
The transmyocardial gradient for antegrade perfusion is defined as follows: Plasma concentration (or oxygen content) in the perfusion line - Plasma concentration (or oxygen content) in the coronary sinus.
Oxygen content is defined as follows: 1.39 x Oxygen saturation x Hemoglobin concentration + 0.0031 x Blood oxygen pressure.
Statistics
Data are presented as means ± SD. Comparisons were performed by using the unpaired Student t test or 2-way analysis of variance for one grouping factor (potassium vs esmolol) and one within factor (time) when appropriate.
| Results |
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Table 2 shows that parameters measured in the retrograde perfusion line, namely oxygen content, plasma glucose concentration, and lactate concentration, were similar in the potassium and esmolol groups at 10 and 30 minutes after aortic crossclamping. Figure 1 shows that TMO2 was lower in the esmolol group than in the potassium group during the entire observational period and that TMO2 increased in all patients, regardless of the cardioplegic agent used, during aortic crossclamping (P < .001). However, the transmyocardial gradients of lactate and glucose were unchanged and in the low physiologic levels in both groups (Table 2
). Accordingly, our data show that myocardial oxygen consumption was consistently less in the esmolol than in the potassium group, with no signs of inadequate oxygen use.
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Hemodynamic and biologic parameters were recorded 4 hours after the operation and compared with those recorded preoperatively in the 41 patients who received retrograde cardioplegia (Table 3). Cardiac index, plasma troponin I level, and plasma lactate level increased in a similar manner in the postoperative period in the 2 groups (P < .01 for all). A similar number of patients received catecholamines, mostly dobutamine, in the post-CPB period in both groups (esmolol group, 7/23; potassium group, 8/18). In addition, plasma troponin I levels at 24 hours after the operation (potassium group, 4.7 ± 2.9 µg x L-1; esmolol group, 6.4 ± 3.0 µg x L-1), ventilation time (esmolol group, 13 ± 17 hours [median, 6 hours]; potassium group, 9 ± 5 hours [median, 7 hours]) and length of stay in the intensive care unit (esmolol group, 3.3 ± 1.8 days; potassium group, 3.5 ± 1.7 days) were similar in both groups. LV ejection fraction measured by means of echocardiography 5 days after the operation was also similar in the esmolol and potassium groups (59% ± 19% and 62% ± 11%, respectively) and unchanged compared with preoperative values. The mortality rate was 0% at 3 months.
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| Discussion |
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Our study showed that esmolol administered during aortic crossclamping markedly reduced TMO2 compared with potassium in all patients, regardless of the direction (antegrade or retrograde) of myocardial perfusion flow. This implies that myocardial oxygen consumption (TMO2 x cardioplegia blood flow) was lower with esmolol than with potassium. This was unexpected. Indeed, because heart contractile activity accounts for 70% to 80% of myocardial oxygen consumption,
23 we expected that heart contraction in the esmolol group, although minimal, would have increased myocardial oxygen consumption to a greater level than that of the unbeating heart in the potassium group. Our data also showed that esmolol-induced low myocardial oxygen consumption was not related to oxygen misconsumption because neither the transmyocardial gradient of lactate nor that of glucose was altered in the esmolol group compared with that in the potassium group at any time. This was confirmed by similar levels of the global marker of myocardial ischemia, plasma troponine I, in both groups at all measured times. Mechanism of the difference in myocardial oxygen consumption between the esmolol and potassium groups remains to be elucidated. Indeed, hyperkalemic cardioplegic solutions induce a depolarization of membrane resting potential and an inactivation of fast Na+ channels that result in diastolic cardiac arrest.
24 However, it also causes Ca2+ influx into cardiac myocyte and cardiac endothelial cells,
25 which results in increasing myocardial oxygen consumption. By contrast, esmolol, as with other ß-blockers, is known to decrease myocardial oxygen consumption and ultimately to improve oxygen use in human patients.
8,15
Our study also showed a lower TMO2 in continuous antegrade cardioplegia compared with that in continuous retrograde blood cardioplegia. This difference is likely explained by the different percentage of nutritive flow delivered to the myocardium with these 2 techniques. Indeed, although the nutritive flow to the myocardium per se is almost 100% of the cardioplegic perfusion in continuous antegrade cardioplegia, it ranges from 30% to 70% in continuous retrograde cardioplegia.
26,27 In the latter, cardioplegic perfusion is partly bypassing the myocardial capillary bed, going directly to the right ventricular or LV cavities through the thebesian veins.
Our study also demonstrated an important transmyocardial gradient of NO release a couple of minutes after the shift of cardioplegia flow direction from antegrade to retrograde in all patients, regardless of the cardioplegic agent used. These data favor endothelial cells as a potential source of NO release rather than cardiac myocytes. Indeed, in our study sudden changes in flow-derived mechanical stresses and the biochemical environment in coronary endothelium after the change of cardioplegic blood flow direction from antegrade to retrograde might have increased endothelial NO release, as previously described.
28,29 These sudden alterations, compared with physiologic conditions, include blood flow direction at the opposite direction of the physiologic alignment of the endothelial cell layer, an increase in coronary venous pressure from a couple of millimeters of mercury in physiologic conditions to 30 to 40 mm Hg during cardioplegia, and a sudden increase in oxygen tension in coronary veins at levels present in the arteries. Our study further showed that potassium induced a sustained NO release during aortic crossclamping, whereas NO release decreased with esmolol during retrograde cardioplegia. Indeed, a high potassium concentration is known to increase the intracellular Ca2+ concentration (see above), which might stimulate the calcium-dependent constitutive isoforms of NO synthase, especially NO synthase 3, in endothelial cells. Although the clinical relevance of the coronary perfusion-induced NO release is still uncertain, evidence shows that NO might have potential beneficial effects on ventricular relaxation, coronary circulation, or both, especially in ischemic and hypertrophied human ventricles,
20 but also deleterious effects if transformed to the toxic oxidant peroxynitrite.
30
In summary, our study showed that esmolol can be safely used as a continuous retrograde protective agent in the hypertrophied human heart. Furthermore, esmolol markedly decreased myocardial oxygen consumption compared with potassium, with no signs of myocardial insult. In addition, our study showed a much greater NO production with retrograde than antegrade cardioplegia, regardless of the agent used.
| Appendix: Discussion |
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I have a couple of questions for you. First, how long was your crossclamp time, and did you refuse antegrade cardioplegia?
Second, in those hearts did you measure and did you have an opportunity to do myocardial biopsies to measure the energetics of the heart, microscopy, cellular edema, and other factors?
Your article is an important contribution. I have come all the way from eliminating potassium from cardioplegia, but I have not used esmolol.
Dr Scorsin. Thank you, Dr Salerno, for your kind remarks. Our crossclamp time was around 60 minutes.
Your second question was whether we have done biopsies or other measurements. No, we made only those measurements I showed you.
Dr Salerno. Did you refuse antegrade or retrograde cardioplegia?
Dr Scorsin. In this protocol, no. It was always continuous retrograde or antegrade cardioplegia.
Dr Uwe Mehlhorn (Cologne, Germany). I have 2 questions. First, did you always achieve complete cardiac arrest with your initial dose of esmolol? Second, what about your reperfusion times on pump? As you know, esmolol has a half-life of about 7 to 9 minutes, and it needs quite a while to be metabolized. What inotropic doses did you need?
Dr Scorsin. Those are good questions. We did not achieve complete arrest of the heart but minimal myocardial contraction with esmolol. So we can see that it is a very depressed myocardium. In this study there is no difference in bypass time after clamping the aorta, but after that, we have been using bypass for all kinds of patients, and we observed that sometimes we need more time to stop the CPB because the heart remained depressed with esmolol. In those patients we infuse a little bit of dobutamine to stimulate ß-adrenergic receptors, and we can quickly stop CPB.
Dr Sidney Levitsky (Boston, Mass). This is a very interesting article because investigators have toyed with ß-blockers for a long period of time. One of the advantages of something like esmolol is that it decreases the myocardial oxygen consumption very rapidly. As you know, the secret is the first 6 seconds, when the heart, after aortic crossclamping, goes from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism. The other advantage I think you have with the ß-blocker is that potassium increases the cytosolic calcium within the cell, and I do not know what happens when you use something like esmolol or a ß-blocker.
As far as you know, has anyone measured cytosolic calcium during a ß-blocker or continuous ß-blocker type of myocardial protection? As you know, the only purpose of using potassium is really to stop the heart from wiggling. In the past we have used, with the Quest System, just potassium and whole blood. That works well on a continuous basis, but if you want to do mitral valve surgery and coronary surgery you are not going to be able to use continuous infusion, unless you want to have a bloody field. I wonder whether this method will work as well under those circumstances.
I am sure you have done it, and you will probably have the answer, but it is very clever, and for aortic valve replacements with short crossclamp times, I think this might be a very valid method.
Dr Scorsin. As to the first question, I have no idea exactly. Nobody knows exactly how ß-blockers work, but I am sure that calcium is one of the main issues involved in oxygen consumption.
About how to perfuse the heart, obviously it seems that the antegrade way is better. However, in these patients there were no coronary lesions. For patients undergoing coronary bypass, we must perfuse in a retrograde manner, and from time to time, as Dr Salerno said, it is better to give 2 or 3 minutes of antegrade perfusion.
Dr Frank W. Sellke (Boston, Mass). Your NO data are a little confusing to me. You are saying that esmolol increases endothelial preservation, yet NO release with esmolol is less. NO release is a very poor indicator of endothelial function, but if you were to use it, I would think that you would make the opposite conclusion.
Dr Scorsin. I will try to explain it better. The only difference that we could draw from the present study is that what induced NO is the direction of flow and of shear stress. Endothelial cells are aligned according to the direction of flow. When you change the direction of flow or when you change pressure or even oxygen content, you can stimulate endothelial cells to produce NO. That was the difference we saw between the antegrade group and the retrograde group.
Dr Sellke. Maintaining NO production is not necessarily.
Dr Scorsin. It is a bad or a good thing? Nobody knows.
Dr Sellke. Well, it is debatable. There is some evidence that NO can help myocardial protection, but I do not think you should be using it as an indicator of endothelial dysfunction or injury. Your title says preserving myocardial metabolism and endothelial function. That is why I ask.
Dr Scorsin. Yes, because if NO is produced, maybe it is by inducible NO synthase.
Dr Sellke. Well, this is pretty early. I do not think so.
Dr Spotnitz. Let's stop right here. You gentlemen can discuss this privately. Dr Lazar or Dr Buckberg, do you have any comments?
Dr Gerald D. Buckberg (Los Angeles, Calif). Well, I am not sure what the NO data mean, but it is an interesting observation. Conceivably what you are seeing is that with retrograde flow that is continuous, you are really perfusing the same area all the time. Normally the heart contracts and relaxes, and that gives a distribution of flow, and maybe what you are seeing with the esmolol is that a small amount of contraction is providing flow to adjacent muscle, and you are seeing a more normal endothelial perfusion with that. Maybe the high NO might reflect the fact you have uneven flow, but it is recoverable. When you get back to normal perfusion you are seeing NO being produced to restore the endothelium. That might be one explanation for what you are seeing. The results were the same.
The other thing is that you are kind of looking at one thing or another, potassium or calcium blockage, and I think protection is not just one thing or the other. I think you have to combine many things. As Dr Salerno says, not only do you have to look at the way you are giving it, but you have to deal with many things when you are doing it. Therefore, you add many other parts to the cardioplegic solution. I do not think any method of protection with a single agent is going to be as good as a combination of things. As we learn more about the combination, I think our cardioplegic solutions will get better at protecting different areas.
Dr Bradley S. Allen (Oak Lawn, Ill). Let's talk a little bit about a different scenario and see what you think. Is it possible that the potassium is perfusing areas of the heart that because the NO is high the esmolol is not getting to? In other words, maybe it is getting to the subendocardium, and the NO is good; it is allowing the potassium to perfuse other areas, and that is why your oxygen content is a little higher because you are perfusing areas that otherwise would not be perfused.
I am curious when you talk about whether it is good or bad. Did you measure pressures in the cardioplegic solution? If the NO was good, then I would expect the pressure to be lower, and if the NO was bad and causing vascular endothelial damage, I expect those vessels to be edematous and not working. Therefore, the perfusion pressure, especially with antegrade cardioplegia, would be higher. Could you comment?
Dr Scorsin. These data are very difficult to understand. We opened the door, and therefore now we must understand what it means and follow with other studies.
| Acknowledgments |
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