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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 109, Issue 5 935-939, Copyright © 1995 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
NOTE: The fulltext of this article is not available online.
A. Ardehali, R. N. Gates, H. Laks, D. C. Drinkwater Jr, E. Rudis, T. J. Sorensen, P. Chang and A. Aharon
Warm retrograde blood cardioplegia is frequently used for myocardial
protection, despite experimental studies questioning the adequacy of
capillary flow to the right ventricle and septum. The capillary
distribution of retrograde blood cardioplegia in the human heart is
unknown. Hearts from eight transplant recipients with the diagnosis of
idiopathic or dilated cardiomyopathy were arrested in situ with cold blood
cardioplegia and excised with the coronary sinus intact. Within 20 minutes
of explanation, colored microspheres mixed in 37 degrees C blood
cardioplegia were administered through the coronary sinus at a pressure of
30 to 40 mm Hg for 2 minutes. Twelve transmural myocardial samples were
taken horizontally at the level of midventricle and apex to determine
regional capillary flow rates. When retrograde warm blood cardioplegia was
administered at a rate of 0.42 +/- 0.06 ml/gm/min, the left ventricle, the
septum, the posterior wall of the right ventricle, and the apex
consistently received capillary flow rates in excess of their metabolic
requirements. The capillary perfusion of anterior and lateral walls of the
right ventricle was marginally adequate to sustain aerobic metabolism. In
explanted human hearts, retrograde blood cardioplegia provides adequate
capillary flow to the left ventricle, the septum, the posterior wall of the
right ventricle, and the apex; however, capillary flow to the anterior and
lateral walls of the right ventricle is marginal. This study delineates the
tenuous balance between supply and demand for right ventricular protection
with warm continuous retrograde blood cardioplegia.
JOURNAL ARTICLE
The regional capillary distribution of retrograde blood cardioplegia in explanted human hearts
Department of Surgery, University of California, Los Angeles Medical Center 90024, USA.
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