The mechanical efficiency of the contractile machinery remained constant at 30-50% (mean 40%) regardless of changes in loading conditions, heart rate, and contractile states.
Experimental study on excised, cross-circulated canine left ventricles to evaluate the mechanical efficiency of the contractile machinery under various loading and inotropic conditions.
Altered loading and inotropic conditions (epinephrine, calcium, pacing) vs Control conditions (baseline loading and contractility) (Epinephrine 1 µg/min/kg iv or 2 µg/min intracoronary; Calcium chloride 0.03 mEq/kg/min iv)
Efficiency of energy conversion from excess oxygen consumption to total mechanical energy (PVA/(excess VO2)), p=>0.05
Absolute Event Rate: 40% vs 40%
p-value: p=>0.05
We have recently proposed that the total mechanical energy generated in each cardiac contraction can be quantified by the systolic pressure-volume area (PVA). PVA is the area in the pressure-volume (P-V) diagram that is circumscribed by the end-systolic and end-diastolic P-V relation curves and the systolic segment of the P-V trajectory. This area has dimensions of energy and comprises the external mechanical work and the elastic potential energy. In the left ventricle of cross-circulated canine hearts, we studied the relation between PVA and oxygen consumption per beat (VO2) above VO2 for mechanically unloaded contraction. We assumed that this excess VO2 is utilized for mechanical contraction by the contractile machinery. The percentage of PVA in the excess VO2, both in the same unit of energy, J, would then represent the efficiency of energy conversion from the excess VO2 to the total mechanical energy in the contractile machinery. We obtained this efficiency in variously loaded contractions in both control and enhanced contractile states with epinephrine and calcium. We found that the efficiency was constant at 30-50 (mean 40) % regardless of the changes in both loading conditions and contractile states. By this constant efficiency and a variable fraction of external work in PVA, we accounted for the load- and contractility-dependent variability of the conventional mechanical efficiency (0-30%) of the heart.
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Hiroyuki Suga
Shinshu University
Osamu Yamada
Kurume University
Yoichi Goto
Preventive Cardiology
The Japanese Journal of Physiology
Cardiovascular Research Center
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Suga et al. (Sun,) conducted a other in Healthy canine model. Altered loading and inotropic conditions (epinephrine, calcium, pacing) vs. Control conditions (baseline loading and contractility) was evaluated on Efficiency of energy conversion from excess oxygen consumption to total mechanical energy (PVA/(excess VO2)) (p=>0.05). The mechanical efficiency of the contractile machinery remained constant at 30-50% (mean 40%) regardless of changes in loading conditions, heart rate, and contractile states.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a201009d5e8712fdf65c3e0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2170/jjphysiol.34.679
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