Does the duration of coronary occlusion affect the extent of myocardial necrosis in dogs?
pentobarbital anesthetized open chest dogs
40 minutes, 3 hours, or 6 hours of temporary circumflex coronary occlusion (CO) followed by 2 to 4 days of reperfusion, or by 24 or 96 hours of permanent circumflex ligation
myocardial necrosis (transmural necrosis)surrogate
Demonstrated that myocardial necrosis progresses as a wavefront from the subendocardium to the subepicardium over time, establishing the time-dependent window for myocardial salvage via reperfusion.
Irreversible ischemic myocardial cell injury developes in an increasing number of cells as the duration of coronary occlusion is prolonged. The present study quantitates myocardial necrosis produced by 40 minutes, 3 hours, or 6 hours of temporary circumflex coronary occlusion (CO) followed by 2 to 4 days of reperfusion, or by 24 or 96 hours of permanent circumflex ligation in pentobarbital anesthetized open chest dogs. After 40 minutes of ischemia, myocyte necrosis was subendocardial but with increasing duration of coronary occlusion, irreversible injury progressed as a wavefront toward the subepicardium. Transmural necrosis was 38 +/- 4% after 40 min, 57 +/- 7% after 3 hours, 71 +/- 7% after 6 hours and 85 +/- 2% after 24 hours of ischemic injury. These results document the presence of a subepicardial zone of ischemic but viable myocardium which is available for pharmacologic or surgical salvage for at least three and perhaps six hours following circumflex occlusion in the dog.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
K A Reimer
J. E. Lowe
Margaret M. Rasmussen
Circulation
Northwestern University
Duke Medical Center
Duke University Hospital
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Reimer et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d56e1c75589c71d767d3d2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.56.5.786
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: