Metabolic interventions that enhance AMP recovery rather than those that improve substrate energy availability are recommended to improve myocardial functional recovery during reperfusion.
Do metabolic interventions that enhance AMP recovery improve myocardial functional recovery during reperfusion following ischemia?
This review suggests that metabolic interventions targeting AMP recovery, rather than substrate energy availability, are more effective for improving myocardial functional recovery during reperfusion after ischemia.
Myocardial recovery during reperfusion following ischemia is critical to patient survival in a broad spectrum of clinical settings. Myocardial functional recovery following ischemia correlates well with recovery of myocardial adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Adenosine triphosphate recovery is uniformly incomplete during reperfusion following moderate ischemic injury and is therefore subject to manipulation by metabolic intervention. By definition ATP recovery is limited either by (1) energy availability and application in the phosphorylation of adenosine monophosphate (AMP) to ATP or (2) availability of AMP for this conversion. Experimental data suggest that substrate energy and the mechanisms required for its application in the creation of high energy phosphate bonds (AMP conversion to ATP) are more than adequate during reperfusion following moderate ischemic injury. Adenosine monophosphate availability, however, is inadequate following ischemia due to loss of diffusable adenine nucleotide purine metabolites. These purine precursors are necessary to fuel adenine nucleotide salvage pathways. Metabolic interventions that enhance AMP recovery rather than those that improve substrate energy availability during reperfusion are therefore recommended. The mechanisms of various metabolic interventions are discussed in this framework along with the rationale for or against their clinical application.
Pasque et al. (Sun,) conducted a review in Myocardial ischemia and reperfusion injury. Metabolic interventions enhancing AMP recovery was evaluated on Myocardial functional recovery and ATP recovery. Metabolic interventions that enhance AMP recovery rather than those that improve substrate energy availability are recommended to improve myocardial functional recovery during reperfusion.
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