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Myocardial apoptosis prevention by radical scavenging in patients undergoing cardiac surgery

Authors :
Uwe M. Fischer
Uwe Mehlhorn
Hans J. Geissler
Paschalis Tossios
Astrid Huebner
Wilhelm Bloch
Source :
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery. (1):103-108
Publisher :
The American Association for Thoracic Surgery. Published by Mosby, Inc.

Abstract

BackgroundReactive oxygen-derived species, including those generated during myocardial ischemia and reperfusion induced by cardioplegia, have been suggested to be involved in myocardial apoptosis induction. The purpose of our study was to investigate (1) whether cardioplegic arrest initiates apoptosis in the hearts of cardiac surgery patients and (2) whether reactive oxygen-derived species scavenging with N-acetylcysteine attenuates myocardial apoptosis initiation.MethodsIn transmural left ventricular biopsy samples collected before and at the end of cardiopulmonary bypass, we densitometrically determined cardiac myocyte staining intensity for active caspases-3 and -7, the apoptosis signal pathway central effector enzymes. The left ventricular biopsy samples had been obtained from 36 coronary artery bypass graft patients randomized in a double-blind fashion to receive either N-acetylcysteine (100 mg/kg into cardiopulmonary bypass prime followed by infusion at 20 mg · kg−1 · h−1; n = 18) or placebo (n = 18).ResultsThe change in left ventricular cardiac myocyte staining (end of cardiopulmonary bypass minus before cardiopulmonary bypass) differed significantly between groups for both measures: caspase-3, −3.1 ± 4.5 gray units (mean ± SD; N-acetylcysteine group) versus 7.1 ± 8.1 gray units (placebo); 95% confidence interval, 6.4 to 14.4; P < .0001; caspase-7, −5.1 ± 6.1 gray units (N-acetylcysteine) versus 5.1 ± 5.7 gray units (placebo); 95% confidence interval, 6.3 to 15.0; P < .0001. Clinical outcome did not differ between N-acetylcysteine and placebo.ConclusionsOur data show that cardioplegic arrest initiates the apoptosis signal cascade in human left ventricular cardiac myocytes. This apoptosis induction can effectively be prevented by N-acetylcysteine.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00225223
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....31b38229b0e43defc22633c3544a1fc5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtcvs.2003.11.034