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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 104, 561-568, Copyright © 1992 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
F Bellotto, RG Johnson, J Watanabe, MJ Levine, A Franklin and RM Weintraub
Mechanical circulatory assistance by ventricular assist devices provides an
opportunity to influence the aortic pressure pattern, which may affect
ventricular loading and coronary perfusion. The effect of synchronous,
pulsatile coronary perfusion of an assist device-supported left ventricle
has not been studied. To analyze the effect of different perfusion patterns
on left ventricular performance and on coronary flow, independent of
pressure and volume loading, we used three different modes of aortic
perfusion in an isometric, contracting, isolated canine heart model. The
effect of nonpulsatile, counter- pulsatile, and copulsatile coronary
perfusion was analyzed in four subgroups to simulate different, clinically
relevant situations (using two different ventricular end-diastolic volumes
[normal and high] and two mean perfusion pressures [normal and critically
low]). Our experiments demonstrated that total coronary flow is optimized
by making the perfusion pressure pulsatile and by synchronously timing the
pump systole with ventricular diastole (counterpulsation). Under identical
conditions of preload and mean perfusion pressure, coronary flow and left
ventricular contractility were decreased during non- pulsatile and
copulsatile aortic perfusion when compared with counterpulsatile flow.
There were no significant differences between the nonpulsatile and
copulsatile modes. We conclude from these data that a nonejecting, but
contracting, left ventricle will have improved systolic function and
coronary blood flow if the coronary perfusion pressure is synchronized in a
counterpulsatile manner. This is a significant implication for mechanical
left ventricular assist devices when used to promote myocardial recovery.
ARTICLES
Mechanical assistance of the left ventricle: acute effect on cardiac performance and coronary flow of different perfusion patterns
Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Beth Israel Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
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