Dobutamine responsiveness, PET mismatch, and lack of necrosis in low-flow ischemia: is this hibernation in the isolated rat heart?

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Abstract

The clinical hallmarks of hibernating myocardium include hypocontractility while retaining an inotropic reserve (using dobutamine echocardiography), having normal or increased [F-18]fluoro-2-deoxyglucose-6-phosphate ((18)FDG6P) accumulation associated with decreased coronary flow [flow-metabolism mismatch by positron emission tomography ( PET)], and recovering completely postrevascularization. In this study, we investigated an isolated rat heart model of hibernation using experimental equivalents of these clinical techniques. Rat hearts (n = 5 hearts/group) were perfused with Krebs-Henseleit buffer for 40 min at 100% flow and 3 h at 10% flow and reperfused at 100% flow for 30 min (paced at 300 beats/min throughout). Left ventricular developed pressure fell to 30 +/- 8% during 10% flow and recovered to 90 +/- 7% after reperfusion. In an additional group, this recovery of function was found to be preserved over 2 h of reperfusion. Electron microscopic examination of hearts fixed at the end of the hibernation period demonstrated a lack of ischemic injury and an accumulation of glycogen granules, a phenomenon observed clinically. In a further group, hearts were challenged with dobutamine during the low-flow period. Hearts demonstrated an inotropic reserve at the expense of increased lactate leakage, with no appreciable creatine kinase release. PET studies used the same basic protocol in both dual- and globally perfused hearts (with 250MBq (18)FDG in Krebs buffer +/- 0.4 mmol/l oleate). PET data showed flow-metabolism "mismatch;" whether regional or global, 18FDG6P accumulation in ischemic tissue was the same as ( glucose only) or significantly higher than (glucose + oleate) control tissue (0.023 +/- 0.002 vs. 0.011 +/- 0.002 normalized counts.s(-1).g-1.min(-1), P <0.05) despite receiving 10% of the flow. This isolated rat heart model of acute hibernation exhibits many of the same characteristics demonstrated clinically in hibernating myocardium.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)H316 - H324
JournalAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-HEART AND CIRCULATORY PHYSIOLOGY
Volume285
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2003

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