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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2007;133:682-688
© 2007 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery
Cardiopulmonary Support and Physiology |
Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Received for publication May 7, 2006; revisions received September 6, 2006; accepted for publication September 11, 2006. * Address for reprints: Frank W. Sellke, MD, Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 110 Francis St, LMOB 2A, Boston, MA 02215 (Email: fsellke{at}caregroup.harvard.edu).
Objective: Mesenteric ischemia is a rare but potentially devastating complication of cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. We hypothesized that alterations in mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways contribute to mesenteric microcirculatory dysfunction resulting from cardiopulmonary bypass.
Methods: Pigs underwent cardiopulmonary bypass (n = 6) for 90 minutes and postbypass reperfusion for 180 minutes. Sham operations (n = 6) were performed on controls. Mesenteric tissue was harvested before bypass and after postbypass reperfusion. Microvascular contraction to phenylephrine and vasopressin was examined by videomicroscopy. Contractile responses with inhibition of the extracellular regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) pathway by PD98059 (30 µmol/L) and p38 kinase inhibition by SB203580 (1 µmol/L) also were determined. Activated forms of ERK1/2 and p38 kinase were measured by Western blot. ERK1/2 and p38 activity were localized in mesenteric tissue by immunohistochemistry.
Results: Contractile responses to phenylephrine were increased at 180 minutes after cardiopulmonary bypass (+49.7% ± 5.5%, P < .01), whereas contraction to vasopressin was unchanged. ERK1/2 pathway inhibition reduced contractile responses to phenylephrine at baseline and 180 minutes after bypass (both P < .01) but had no effect on contraction to vasopressin. p38 Kinase inhibition decreased the contractile responses to vasopressin at baseline and 180 minutes after bypass (both P < .01) but did not alter the contractile response to phenylephrine. Activated ERK1/2 levels were increased by more than 40% at 180 minutes after bypass (P < .01). Protein levels of activated p38 kinase were not changed. The increased ERK1/2 activity was associated with mesenteric arterioles by immunohistochemistry.
Conclusions: A differential pattern of mesenteric vasomotor regulation exists after cardiopulmonary bypass that may contribute to the risk of mesenteric ischemia after cardiac surgery.
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