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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 106, 458-462, Copyright © 1993 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
M Kawauchi, SR Gundry, F Beierle, J Alonso de Begona and LL Bailey
Serum levels of cardiac myosin light chain 1 after heart transplantation
were studied in 24 infants and children who underwent heart transplantation
between June 1990 and April 1991. The ages of the patients ranged from 4
days to 6 years 7 months (mean, 9.9 months), and their body weights ranged
from 2.2 to 20 kg (mean, 5.6 kg). The ages of the donors ranged from 2 days
to 8 years, 7 months (mean, 26.6 months), and their body weights ranged
from 2.5 to 26 kg (mean, 11.4 kg). The donor heart ischemic time ranged
from 90 minutes to 482 minutes (mean, 279 minutes). Peak myosin levels
after heart transplantation showed significant correlation with the
duration of graft ischemia (p < 0.01) and with diastolic cardiac
function in the first posttransplant week (p < 0.05). Peak myosin levels
did not correlate with systolic cardiac function, age of the donor, or age
of the recipient. Myosin levels of the 15 patients with graft ischemic
times exceeding 4 hours averaged 6.30 +/- 3.50 ng/ml. These levels were
significantly higher than those of patients with graft ischemia lasting
less than 4 hours (2.60 +/- 1.20 ng/ml; p < 0.01). Both of the values
are higher than previously reported values of normal controls but lower
than previously reported values of patients with myocardial infarction.
Preservation techniques used for this series of transplant operations
provided good clinical protection of the donor heart for up to 8 hours,
although release of the cardiac myosin light chain fragment correlated with
duration of graft ischemia. Cardiac myosin levels appeared to be a good
indicator of heart graft damage during ischemic preservation. It remains to
be determined at what level of myosin release (and, hence, at what duration
of graft ischemia) irreversible myocardial damage, which might result in
permanent functional compromise, occurs.
ARTICLES
Myosin light chain efflux after heart transplantation in infants and children and its correlation with ischemic preservation time
Loma Linda University Medical Center, Department of Surgery, CA 92354.
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