1. Consequences of reperfusion after coronary occlusion
- Author
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Herbert Gold, Eliot Corday, Costantino Costantini, Steven Rubins, Victor Rosen, Samuel Meerbaum, Tzu-Wang Lang, Shigeru Hirose, and Jules Osher
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Hemodynamics ,Coronary circulation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Coronary occlusion ,Anesthesia ,Shock (circulatory) ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,medicine ,Vascular resistance ,Ventricular pressure ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Reactive hyperemia ,Coronary sinus - Abstract
Hemodynamic and regional metabolic measurements were obtained in seven closed chest dogs during a control period, 3 hours of coronary occlusion and 5 hours of reperfusion. Reperfusion resulted in intermittent ectopic arrhythmias in five dogs and severe shock in two. It usually caused increases in heart rate, coronary sinus flow and maximal isovolumetric rate of rise in left ventricular pressure (dP/dt), which were associated with a decrease in systemic pressure, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, systemic vascular resistance and stroke work. A transitory increase in cardiac output occurred. Global myocardial oxygen consumption, which was reduced during occlusion, increased with reperfusion. Reperfusion induced abnormal lactate metabolism and myocardial potassium loss in the previously occluded area and often in the nonoccluded segment as well. Histopathologic changes of accelerated necrosis, reactive hyperemia and hemorrhage were often noted after reperfusion. These studies indicate that reperfusion after 3 hours of occlusion caused serious abnormalities in hemodynamic states, metabolic function and morphologic features of the heart.
- Published
- 1974
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