Inhibition of NO synthase with L-NAME or ceramidase with NOE prevented the progressive decrease in posterior systolic wall thickening 8 hours after coronary microembolization in dogs.
27 anesthetized dogs subjected to coronary microembolization to study the signal transduction cascade of NO, TNF-alpha, and sphingosine.
L-NAME or NOE vs Placebo or sham operation (L-NAME intracoronary; NOE intravenous)
Posterior systolic wall thickening (PWT) at 8 hours
Absolute Event Rate: 17.7% vs 4.1%
Coronary microembolization results in progressive myocardial dysfunction, with causal involvement of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha). TNF-alpha uses a signal transduction involving nitric oxide (NO) and/or sphingosine. Therefore, we induced coronary microembolization in anesthetized dogs and studied the role and sequence of NO, TNF-alpha, and sphingosine for the evolving contractile dysfunction. Four sham-operated dogs served as controls (group 1). Eleven dogs received placebo (group 2), 6 dogs received the NO synthase inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, group 3), and 6 dogs received the ceramidase inhibitor N-oleoylethanolamine (NOE, group 4) before microembolization was induced by infusion of 3000 microspheres (42-microm diameter) per milliliter inflow into the left circumflex coronary artery. Posterior systolic wall thickening (PWT) remained unchanged in group 1 but decreased progressively in group 2 from 20.6+/-4.9% (mean+/-SD) at baseline to 4.1+/-3.7% at 8 hours after microembolization. Leukocyte count, TNF-alpha, and sphingosine contents were increased in the microembolized posterior myocardium. In group 3, PWT remained unchanged (20.3+/-2.6% at baseline) with intracoronary administration of L-NAME (20.8+/-3.4%) and 17.7+/-2.3% at 8 hours after microembolization; TNF-alpha and sphingosine contents were not increased. In group 4, PWT also remained unchanged (20.7+/-4.6% at baseline) with intravenous administration of NOE (19.5+/-5.7%) and 16.4+/-6.3% at 8 hours after microembolization; TNF-alpha, but not sphingosine content, was increased. In all groups, systemic hemodynamics, anterior systolic wall thickening, and regional myocardial blood flow remained unchanged throughout the protocols. A signal transduction cascade of NO, TNF-alpha, and sphingosine is causally involved in the coronary microembolization-induced progressive contractile dysfunction.
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Matthias Thielmann
Cardiac Surgery
Hilmar Dörge
Klinikum Fulda
Claus Martin
Klinik und Poliklinik für Urologie
Circulation Research
Universitätsklinikum Tübingen
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Thielmann et al. (Fri,) conducted a other in Coronary microembolization-induced myocardial dysfunction (n=27). L-NAME or NOE vs. Placebo or sham operation was evaluated on Posterior systolic wall thickening (PWT) at 8 hours. Inhibition of NO synthase with L-NAME or ceramidase with NOE prevented the progressive decrease in posterior systolic wall thickening 8 hours after coronary microembolization in dogs.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a2088e0a5754bb7efc63940 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.0000014451.75415.36