Reducing left ventricle pressures and volumes shifted the coronary artery pressure-flow relationships leftward (p = 0.001) while preserving the distribution of blood flow across the ventricular wall.
p-value: p=0.001
The influence of left ventricle pressure and volume changes on coronary blood flow was investigated in eight anesthetized dogs. Coronary artery pressure-flow relationships were determined at two levels of left ventricular pressure and volume. The distribution of blood flow within the myocardium was also determined when these relationships varied. Reducing left ventricle pressures and volumes increased heart rate. Rate-pressure product, diastolic coronary pressure, myocardial O2 consumption, total, subendocardial and subepicardial flow decreased. Hematocrit and blood gas data were unchanged. The pressure-flow relationships were shifted leftward (p = 0.001) but the range of autoregulation was not altered. At low left ventricle pressures and volumes, the lower coronary artery pressure limit was shifted leftward (from 75 to 45 mm Hg (1 mm Hg = 133.3 Pa)), while total, subendocardial, and subepicardial blood flow did not change compared with the control. Below the lower coronary artery pressure limit, subendocardial but not subepicardial flow decreased, resulting in maldistribution of flow across the left ventricular wall. When coronary pressure was reset between control and the lower coronary artery pressure limit, subendocardial flow was restored. These results show that the lower coronary artery pressure limit can be shifted leftward while the distribution of blood flow across the left ventricular wall is preserved.
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Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology
Université Laval
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Rouleau et al. (Mon,) reported a other. Reducing left ventricle pressures and volumes vs. Control was evaluated on Coronary artery pressure-flow relationships (p=0.001). Reducing left ventricle pressures and volumes shifted the coronary artery pressure-flow relationships leftward (p = 0.001) while preserving the distribution of blood flow across the ventricular wall.
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