Does coronary reperfusion 3 hours after occlusion improve left ventricular wall motion and how does it correlate with infarct size and cardiac myosin light chain II release in conscious dogs?
In a canine model, early left ventricular wall motion after reperfusion does not correlate with ultimate infarct size, whereas 14-day wall motion and total cardiac myosin light chain II release correlate well with infarct size.
The time course of recovery of left ventricular wall motion after coronary reperfusion and how that relates to anatomical infarct size, wall motion abnormality, and the amount of cardiac myosin light chain II release were evaluated in conscious dogs. One week after the implantation of hydraulic occluders on the left circumflex arteries, myocardial infarction was induced. Coronary reperfusion was performed 3 h after the occlusion in 9 dogs (R) and occlusion was sustained in 9 dogs (C). All dogs underwent serial 2-dimensional echocardiograms and determination of serum cardiac myosin light chain II. The infarct size was identified at 14 days. Systolic wall thickening at the center of the ischemic area (SWT) at 3 h was -7.7 +/- 2.8% (C), -9.9 +/- 3.0% (R). Systolic thinning was observed even at 14 days in C. Significant recovery of contraction was observed in R, but the improvement continued for as long as 2 days. SWT at 14 days was -1.5 +/- 2.8% (C) and 7.0 +/- 4.6% (R) (p less than 0.05). All of SWT or the extent of systolic thinning (EST) 3-hour and 14-day were correlated well with infarct size in C. In group R, 14-day SWT and 14-day EST correlated with infarct size but 3-hour SWT and 3-hour EST did not. Total release of serum cardiac myosin light chain II levels correlated well with infarct size (r = 0.88), 14-day SWT (r = -0.90) and 14-day EST (r = 0.89) in all dogs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Isobe et al. (Sun,) studied this question.