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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypothermia
is known to protect myocardium during ischemia, but its role in induction of a protective stress response before ischemia has not been evaluated. As cold incites stress responses in other tissues, including heat shock protein induction and signaling mitochondrial biogenesis, we postulated that
hypothermia
in perfused hearts would produce similar phenomena while reducing injury during subsequent ischemia. Studies were performed in isolated perfused rabbit hearts (n = 77): a control group (C) and a hypothermic group (H) subjected to decreasing infusate temperature from 37 to 31 degrees C over 20 min. Subsequent ischemia during cardioplegic arrest at 34 degrees C for 120 min was followed by reperfusion. At 15 min of reperfusion, recovery of left ventricular developed pressure (LVDP), maximum first derivative of left ventricular pressure (LV dP/dtmax), LV -dP/dtmax, and the product of heart rate and LVDP was significantly increased in H (P < 0.01) compared with C hearts. Ischemic contracture started later in H (97.5 +/- 3.6 min) than in C (67.3 +/- 3.3 min) hearts. Myocardial ATP preservation and repletion during ischemia and reperfusion were higher in H than in C hearts. mRNA levels of the nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins adenine nucleotide translocase isoform 1 (ANT1) and beta-F1-adenosine-triphosphatase (beta-F1-ATPase) normalized to 28S RNA decreased in C hearts but were preserved in H hearts after reperfusion. Inducible heat shock protein (HSP70-1) mRNA was elevated nearly 4-fold after ischemia in C hearts and 12-fold in H hearts. These data indicate that
hypothermia
preserves myocardial function and ATP stores during subsequent ischemia and reperfusion. Signaling for mitochondrial biogenesis indexed by ANT1 and beta-
F1-ATPase
mRNA levels is also preserved during a marked increase in HSP70-1 mRNA.
...
PMID:Hypothermia preserves function and signaling for mitochondrial biogenesis during subsequent ischemia. 953 Jan 89
Hypothermia
improves resistance to ischemia in the cardioplegia-arrested heart. This adaptive process produces changes in specific signaling pathways for mitochondrial proteins and heat-shock response. To further test for hypothermic modulation of other signaling pathways such as apoptosis, we used various molecular techniques, including cDNA arrays. Isolated rabbit hearts were perfused and exposed to ischemic cardioplegic arrest for 2 h at 34 degrees C [ischemic group (I); n = 13] or at 30 degrees C before and during ischemia [hypothermic group (H); n = 12]. Developed pressure, the maximum first derivative of left ventricular pressure, oxygen consumption, and pressure-rate product (P < 0.05) recovery were superior in H compared with in I during reperfusion. mRNA expression for the mitochondrial proteins, adenine translocase and the beta-subunit of
F1-ATPase
, was preserved by
hypothermia
. cDNA arrays revealed that ischemia altered expression of 13 genes.
Hypothermia
modified this response to ischemia for eight genes, six related to apoptosis. A marked, near fivefold increase in transformation-related protein 53 in I was virtually abrogated in H.
Hypothermia
also increased expression for the anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 homologue Bcl-x relative to I but decreased expression for the proapoptotic Bcl-2 homologue bak. These data imply that
hypothermia
modifies signaling pathways for apoptosis and suggest possible mechanisms for
hypothermia
-induced myocardial protection.
...
PMID:Hypothermic protection of the ischemic heart via alterations in apoptotic pathways as assessed by gene array analysis. 1196 Sep 75
Severe cardiac hypoxia is responsible for significant morbidity and mortality in an emergency setting. Most cardiac hypoxia relates to ischemia and surgical events. Although the ischemic mortality rate and the risks of cardiac surgery have significantly decreased in past decades, myocardial protection still plays a major role in survival of hypoxic injury. Cross adaptation as a physiological regulation for homeostasis can resist injury caused by harmful environmental effects and diseases, including hypothermic adaptation. Treatment with
hypothermia
has been used for fifty years as a protective mechanism to avoid hypoxic injury. Since cold temperatures can cause damage, it is important to gather physiological data to distinguish protective from injurious temperatures. Although results of temperature trials in clinical practice vary, a critical temperature to resist hypoxic/ischemic injury in heart was found to be around 30 degrees C, suggesting a
hypothermia
protective threshold. Pretreatment with mild
hypothermia
can resist subsequent hypoxia/ischemia, implying involvement of cross adaptation in protection. Safeguard
hypothermia
can directly reduce the build up of harmful metabolites and energy demand in hypoxic tissues, as well as preserve mitochondrial membrane specific proteins beta subunit of
F1-ATPase
and adenine nucleotide translocase isoform 1. Mechanisms of preservation include inactivation of the p53 related pathways, representing anti-apoptosis, and modification of the mRNA level of succinodehydrogenease, indicating a beneficial effect on the aerobic pathway. Stress proteins are also induced. Resultant cellular adaptations serve to maintain myocardial integrity and improve functional recovery during reoxygenation or reperfusion.
...
PMID:Mild hypothermic cross adaptation resists hypoxic injury in hearts: a brief review. 1729 29