Coronary oxygen persufflation for heart preservation in pigs: analyses of endothelium and myocytes

Ferdinand Kuhn-Régnier, Wilhelm Bloch, Ilias Tsimpoulis, Marc Reismann, Oguzan Dagktekin, Stefanie Jeschkeit-Schubbert, Claudia Funcke, Jochen W U Fries, Klaus Addicks, Ernst R de Vivie, Jürgen H Fischer

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschung

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Coronary oxygen persufflation (COP) has been shown to prolong heart preservation time up to 14 hr in a mature pig model, with excellent recovery after orthotopic transplantation. The aim of the present study was to assess the structural, metabolic, and functional myocardial and endothelial integrity after COP in mature pig hearts.

METHODS: Cardioplegic arrest was induced by original crystalloid Bretschneider solution (HTK 3h, n=6), modified Bretschneider solution (mHTK+COP, n=6), or University of Wisconsin solution (UW+COP, n=6). Hearts were stored for 3 (HTK 3h) or 14 hr (mHTK+COP, UW+COP) at 0 degrees to 1 degrees C. In addition, COP hearts were persufflated. After heterotopic transplantation and reperfusion for 7 days, hearts were analyzed by light microscopy or electron microscopy for structural injuries. Endothelial function, cardiac enzymes, metabolic parameters, and myocardial water content (MWC) were determined. Six recipient hearts served as controls.

RESULTS: Quantitative light microscopic analyses and semiquantitative electron microscopic analyses showed an equal amount of damage in all groups including HTK 3h hearts. No rejection was observed. Substance P induced an equal dilatation in all hearts. Serum levels of cardiac enzymes were similar in all groups, but energy-enriched phosphates were significantly reduced, and MWC was augmented in the HTK 3h hearts and in the UW+COP hearts, in contrast to the mHTK+COP transplants.

CONCLUSIONS: The lack of structural defects related to the COP technique, similar endothelial function, and an even better metabolic state of the mHTK+COP hearts versus HTK 3h hearts demonstrate the efficacy of the COP technique for prolongation of myocardial preservation time up to 14 hr.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftTransplantation
Jahrgang77
Ausgabenummer1
Seiten (von - bis)28-35
Seitenumfang8
ISSN0041-1337
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 15.01.2004

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