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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 106, 811-822, Copyright © 1993 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
LD Segel and DM Follette
This study was undertaken to determine whether hearts preserved with
intermittent coronary perfusion would recover physiologic function after a
prolonged period of hypothermic preservation. Intermittent perfusion is
commonly used for cardioplegia, but its efficacy in long- term heart
preservation has not yet been demonstrated. Five groups of isolated rat
hearts were studied (n = 7 per group): (1) fresh nonpreserved control
hearts; (2) hearts preserved with continuous low- pressure perfusion via
the aorta; (3) hearts preserved with cycles of 5 minutes of perfusion
followed by 25 minutes of nonperfusion; (4) hearts preserved with cycles of
10 minutes of perfusion followed by 25 minutes of nonperfusion; (5) hearts
preserved with submersion storage without perfusion. An oxygenated
extracellular-type crystalloid medium (oxygen tension = 820 +/- 5 mm Hg)
was used as a preservation medium; preservation was for 12 hours. During
preservation, the coronary resistance of the intermittent
perfusion-preserved hearts increased significantly, and these hearts
produced significantly more excess lactate than did hearts in the other two
preservation groups. The submersion-stored hearts exhibited no
postpreservation ventricular function in an isolated perfused working rat
heart system. The poststorage function of the other four groups, which was
quantified during a 4-hour, 37 degrees C perfusion period at constant heart
rate, indicated that there were no significant group differences with
respect to output or energetics (coronary flow, aortic output, cardiac
output, myocardial oxygen consumption, and external work efficiency). The
intermittent perfusion-preserved hearts had significantly lower
postpreservation contractile function (left ventricular systolic pressure,
peak rates of left ventricular pressure development and relaxation, peak
aortic flow rate, stroke work, and peak power) and higher left ventricular
end-diastolic pressure compared with the control group. Although hearts
preserved with intermittent perfusion had a loss of contractile function
and decreased compliance compared with fresh hearts, after preservation
they had better function than did hearts preserved with submersion storage
and the same function as hearts preserved with continuous perfusion.
ARTICLES
Long-term heart preservation by intermittent perfusion with crystalloid medium
Department of Internal Medicine, University of California School of Medicine, Davis 95616.
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D. T. Engelman, C.-z. Chen, M. Watanabe, P. Kulshrestha, D. K. Das, J. A. Rousou, J. E. Flack III, D. W. Deaton, and R. M. Engelman Hypoxic Preconditioning Enhances Functional Recovery After Prolonged Cardioplegic Arrest Ann. Thorac. Surg., February 1, 1995; 59(2): 428 - 432. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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