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J Am Coll Cardiol, 1986; 7:414-418
© 1986 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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Afferent reinnervation of the autotransplanted heart in dogs

PK Mohanty, MD Thames, Capehart JR, A Kawaguchi, B Ballon, and RR Lower

Patients have been observed with a chest pain syndrome after cardiac transplantation. For this pain to be cardiac in origin the afferent nerves carrying sensory information from the heart would have to reinnervate the heart. A previous study in dogs indicated that afferent reinnervation is uncommon during the first 2 years after transplantation. The purpose of this study was to determine whether afferent reinnervation of the heart occurs in the long term. The decreases in arterial pressure and renal nerve activity resulting from chemical stimulation of left ventricular sensory receptors with vagal afferents with cryptenamine (veratrum alkaloid) were assessed in three dogs 8 to 12 years and in four dogs 6 to 8 weeks after cardiac autotransplantation and in six sham-operated dogs (thoracotomy-pericardiotomy 6 to 8 weeks before study). Responses of renal nerve activity to physiologic stimulation of cardiac receptors by volume expansion were also determined. Left ventricular cryptenamine inhibited renal nerve activity by 72 +/- 8% in dogs with long-term and by 10 +/- 6% in dogs with short-term autotransplantation and by 92 +/- 5% in sham-operated dogs. Decreases in mean arterial pressure in these groups were 34 +/- 4, 11 +/- 3 and 67 +/- 16 mm Hg, respectively. Volume expansion inhibited renal nerve activity in long-term autotransplant (43%) and sham-operated (48%) groups but less in the short-term transplant group (33%) for comparable increases in cardiac filling pressure. It is concluded that in dogs there is extensive afferent reinnervation of the long-term autotransplanted heart that results in relatively normal cardiopulmonary baroreflex responses to volume expansion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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