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J Am Coll Cardiol, 1989; 13:1395-1401
© 1989 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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Treatment of reperfusion injury with intracoronary calcium channel antagonists and reduced coronary free calcium concentration in regionally ischemic, reperfused porcine hearts

HH Klein, S Pich, S Lindert, K Nebendahl, G Warneke, and H Kreuzer

Department of Cardiology, University of Gottingen, West Germany.

The effect of intracoronary diltiazem, EGTA (ethylene-bis-(beta-aminomethylether)-N,N'-tetraacetic acid), nifedipine, verapamil and isotonic saline solution as placebo on reperfusion injury was investigated in regionally ischemic, reperfused porcine hearts. The left anterior descending coronary artery was distally occluded for 45 min and was reperfused for 3 days. Intracoronary infusion was started immediately before reperfusion and continued during 45 min of reperfusion. Infarct size was determined as the ratio of infarcted (tetrazolium stain) to ischemic myocardium (dye technique). Regional systolic shortening was assessed by sonomicrometry. Apart from left ventricular end-diastolic pressure before ischemia and during 45 min of reperfusion, global hemodynamic values in the five treatment groups did not differ; in particular, calculated left ventricular oxygen consumption before and during ischemia was equally low. Intracoronary EGTA decreased coronary venous free calcium concentration to about 70% of baseline value. Infarct size was reduced from 76 +/- 10% (control group, n = 8) to 60 +/- 10% (p less than 0.01) by intracoronary diltiazem (n = 8) and to 55 +/- 15% (p less than 0.01) by intracoronary EGTA (n = 8). Insignificant reductions in infarct size were found after treatment with intracoronary verapamil (63 +/- 18%, n = 8) and intracoronary nifedipine (68 +/- 9%, n = 7). Regional systolic shortening of the risk region, which did not differ among the groups before occlusion and during ischemia, recovered to the greatest extent in the EGTA-treated pigs (p less than 0.01 compared with values in the control group). Treatment with intracoronary calcium antagonists resulted in only marginal improvement of systolic shortening.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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