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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Nitroglycerin (TNG) reduces ischemic injury during acute coronary occlusion in dogs with otherwise normal coronary arteries, but its effect in the presence of pre-existing multivessel coronary disease is unknown. We therefore examined the influence of TNG on acute ischemia in dogs with chronic multivessel coronary occlusions. The left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery was acutely occluded by a balloon cuff in conscious dogs two weeks after placement of ameroid constrictors to produce gradual occlusion of the obtuse marginal and posterior descending coronary arteries. Adequacy of balloon and ameroid coronary occlusion and degree of collateralization were assessed by coronary angiography. Nitroglycerin decreased arterial pressure and increased heart rate. Myocardial ischemia, determined after LAD occlusion by summing ST-segment elevation (sigmaST) from eight intramyocardial electrodes, lessened with TNG in those six dogs whose heart rate increased less than 50 per cent, but increased in those four whose heart rate increased greater than 50 per cent. When TNG-induced change in either heart rate or arterial pressure was prevented by adding methoxamine, sigma ST was diminished even more (avg decrease 25 per cent; P smaller than 0.05). We conclude that, in the presence of pre-existing multivessel coronary occlusions, 1) TNG reduces ischemic injury during experimental acute coronary occlusion provided arterial pressure and heart rate responses are not excessive and 2) uniform improvement occurs when pressure and rate responses are abolished by an alpha-adrenergic agonist. Although results in animal studies must be extrapolated to the clinical situation with caution, these findings suggest that a similar pharmacologic approach might be applicable to the treatment of acute myocardial infarction in man, even in the presence of multivessel disease.
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PMID:Effects of nitroglycerin and nitroglycerin-methoxamine during acute myocardial ischemia in dogs with pre-existing multivessel coronary occlusive disease. 80 82

Nitroglycerin (NTG) traditionally has bben avoided in the treatment of pain caused by acute myocardial infarction because of the belief that NTG-induced decrease in arterial pressure and concomitant reflex increase in heart rate might extend the ischemic process. However, recent experimental and clinical investigations cast doubt on this concept. For example, when the left anterior descending coronary artery is acutely occluded in normal dogs or in dogs when chronic coronary occlusions and extensive collaterals, NTG reduces ST-segment evevation (and presumably myocardial ischemia). This salutary effect occurs despite lowering of systemic arterial pressure, as long as excessive reflex tachycardia does not result; the magnitude of ischemia reduction is potentiated when methoxamine or phenylephrine are administered simultaneously to abolish the NTG -induced hypotension and reflex tachycardia. NTG and methoxamine treatment also results in 1) reduction of infarct size as (as assessed by gross morphologic examinations and myocardial CPK levels) in dogs subjected to 5 hours of coronary occlusion, and 2) increase in ventricular fibrillation (VF) threshold and reduction of the incidence of spontaneously occurring VF in dogs with acute coronary occlusion. Finally, the effectiveness of NTG during acute myocardial iinfarction (AMI) in man has been studied. Multiple precordial electrodes were used to measure changes in the degree of ST-segment elevation; these changes were used as an index of alterations in myocardial ischemic injury. Patients with normal pulmonary capillary wedge pressures ( less than 15 mm Hg) did not benefit consistently from NTG alone; however, when phenylephrine was administered with NTG (to abolish NTG-induced arterial pressure reduction and reflex increase in heart rate), ST-segment elevation diminished consistently. In patients with elevated wedge pressures ( greater than 15 mm Hg), NTG alone consistently reduced ischemia; addition of phenylephrine often partially reversed this benefit. Thus, administration of NTG, alone or with phenylephrine, appears to reduce myocardial ischemic injury during AMI in man; however, the response to phenylephrine depends upon the presence or absence of LV failure prior to treatment. These experimental and clinical results suggest this form of therapy may be use in reducing infarct size in man, although additional studies are necessary to determine the functional significance of these acute electrophysiologic alterations.
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PMID:Protection of ischemic myocardium by nitroglycerin: experimental and clinical results. 81 59

The relevance to man of experimental observations on coronary collateral blood flow (CCBF) in dogs has been questioned. The effect of 2 to 3 hour coronary occlusions in the anesthetized dog and a primate, the baboon, were therefore compared, with CCBF measured by injections of 85Kr distal to occlusion with precordial counting. Before killing, additional isotope was infused to compare inner/outer wall flow distribution and myocardial tissue samples were analyzed for electrolyte content. Effects of nitrates on hemodynamics and metabolism were also compared in dog and baboon. Similar values for CCBF and resistance following occlusions were found in dog and baboon (flow approximately 25 per cent control, calculated resistance increase four- to sevenfold). Greater subendocardial ischemia in both species was indicated by isotope distribution less to the inner wall, but electrolyte changes (k+ less and Na+ greater in the ischemic area compared to nonischemic) were similar transmurally in both species. Hemodynamic responses to nitrate infusion (isosorbide dinitrate) were similar, with increase in CCBF and decrease in resistance. In neither group were inner/outer wall isotope distribution or electrolyte changes influenced by nitrate. The coronary collateral response to occlusion is similar in dog and baboon in terms of both hemodynamics and metabolic changes. After 2 to 3 hours of coronary occlusion some hemodynamic benefit may be demonstrated with nitrates but no metabolic advantage, at least in the central area of ischemia.
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PMID:Comparison of the coronary collateral circulation in dogs and baboons after coronary occlusion. 82 26

Sympathetic discharges to the heart were recorded from the left inferior cardiac nerve of 16 dogs. Inferior cardiac nerve activity (ICNA) under normal conditions consisted of grouped discharges, synchronous with the cardiac cycle and modulated by respiration. After ligation of the circumflex branch of the left coronary artery, ICNA declined concomitant with a decline in heart rate and mean aortic pressure. After 30 minutes, when arterial pressure tended to recover toward control values (six dogs), ICNA remained low; in contrast, when arterial pressure dropped to shock levels (three dogs), ICNA increaed. When aortic pressure fell precipitously as a result of ventricular fibrillation, even during the first 30 minutes of ischemia (seven dogs), ICNA immediately increased greatly. The results of this study suggest that acute coronary occlusion produces a cardiocardiac depressor reflex with attenuation of sympathetic discharge to the heart. This reflex, under the experimental conditions studied, gives way to the baroreceptor reflex when aortic pressure drops to critically low levels.
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PMID:Attenuation of cardiac sympathetic drive in experimental myocardial ischemia in dogs. 83 14

Myocardial 201Tl uptake and regional blood flow by the microsphere technique were determined in anesthetized dogs undergoing either 20 min of coronary occlusion and 100 min of reperfusion (N = 10) or 120 min of occlusion (N = 4). In both groups, 201Tl was injected intravenously after 10 min of occlusion. In transiently occluded dogs, regional flow at the time of 201Tl administration was reduced to 8 +/- 3% of normal flow in endocardial layers of the central ischemic zone. After 100 min of reperfusion, flow values were not significantly different from normal. 201Tl activity after reperfusion rose to 56 +/- 5% of normal, demonstrating that redistribution of the radionuclide occurred during the reflow period. In animals with persistent occlusion, there was a significant relationship between 201Tl uptake and flow (r = 0.95) and no evidence of redistribution of 201Tl during the two hour occlusion period. In another five dogs receiving 201Tl, serial gamma camera images obtained during reperfusion showed increasing uptake of the tracer in apical defects which returned to normal by 4 hours of reflow. Thirteen patients with stable angina received 2 mCi of 201Tl intravenously at peak exercise, and multiple gamma camera images obtained serially. All demonstrated zones of diminished 201Tl uptake 10 min after exercise. Defects which partially or completely disappeared within 1-6 hours postexercise corresponded to areas supplied by coronary arteries with significant stenoses. Persistent defects were present in regions of old myocardial infarction. Six additional patients with acute myocardial infarction demonstrated 201Tl myocardial defects which showed no significant change over 6 hours. Thus, redistribution of 201Tl into ischemic myocardium was demonstrated during transient coronary occlusion in dogs and after exercise stress in man. Sequential imaging after a single dose of 201Tl at the time of exercise may provide a means for distinguishing between transient perfusion abnormalities or ischemia and myocardial infarction of scar.
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PMID:Differentiation of transiently ischemic from infarcted myocardium by serial imaging after a single dose of thallium-201. 83 45

"Ischemic" blood was obtained in pigs from a local coronary vein on release of coronary artery occlusion. The effects of this blood on transmembrane potentials of muscle strips taken from the same heart were compared with control blood. Whereas action potentials remained stable in control blood, ischemic blood collected after more than 15 minutes of coronary occlusion produced shortening of action potential duration, reduction of resting potential, upstroke velocity and amplitude, then postrepolarization refractoriness and finally unresponsiveness. Ischemic blood collected after shorter periods of coronary occlusion produced only mild effects (shortening of action potential and postrepolarization refractoriness). These effects of ischemic blood could not be attributed to increased potassium concentration even in combination with acidosis, hypoxia and hypoglycemia. It appears that during ischemia unidentified factors are released which have potent depressant effects on the excitability of even normal myocardium.
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PMID:The effect of "ischemic" blood on transmembrane potentials of normal porcine ventricular myocardium. 83 81

This study was designed to examine the relationship between epicardial ST change (EpST) and regional myocardial blood flow (RMBF) following coronary occlusion and extent of myocardial infarction (MI) in awake dogs. Fifteen min and two hr after coronary occlusion simultaneous measurements of EpST and RMBF were made. Six days later histologic MI and RMBF were determined in transmural myocardial samples from each electrode site. Greatest ST elevation occurred at sites of greatest ischemia and MI. However, 15 min after occlusion 29% of sites with greater than 50% MI and 39% of sites with greater than 50% reduction in RMBF did not demonstrate ST elevation greater than 2 mV. There were poor correlations between EpST and MI (r = 0.59) and RMBF (r = 0.57). Comparable relationships were observed two hr after occlusion. In the present study, there were not close quantitative or qualitative relationships between EpST and MI or RMBF. A good correlation was observed between RMBF at two hr and MI (r = 0.89).
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PMID:Relationship between epicardial ST-segment elevation, regional myocardial blood flow, and extent of myocardial infarction in awake dogs. 85 82

Estimation of the extent of regional ischemia by scintigraphic methods has been hampered by the geometric constraints of two-dimensional imaging. Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy was performed using the Fresnel zone-plate tomographic camera after the injection of Tc-99m microspheres (20-40 micron) into a coronary artery. Coronary artery occlusion was performed in six dogs by embolization via a catheter guidewire system. Twenty milicuries of Tc-99m microspheres were injected into the left main coronary artery of the six occluded and three unoccluded dogs. Scintigraphy was performed in multiple projections in the living animal. Optical reconstruction of the holographic image provided tomographic gamma images of the heart. Scintigraphy was also performed with an Anger camera for comparison. The extent of the perfusion defect was measured by planimetry and expressed as a percentage of the ventricular area in that projection. The average of the right and left anterior oblique projections provided the most accurate estimate of the size of the perfusion defect (average error: 13.6%; range: 0-38.2%). Fresnel zone-plate imaging provided an accurate in vivo assessment of the extent of altered myocardial perfusion.
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PMID:Tomographic scintigraphy of regional myocardial perfusion. 87 62

Using an experimental canine model, we have employed echocardiography to study segmental dyskinesis produced by acute coronary occlusion. Characteristic alterations in posterior wall and septal motion occur after acute coronary ligation; these resemble clinical abnormalities described in acute and old myocardial infarction. The degree of dyskinesis produced is directly related to the severity of the perfusion deficit. Coronary reperfusion had variable effects on dyskinesis; most animals showed improvement but in some the myocardial contraction abnormalities became more severe. A vaviety of interventions were undertaken during ischemia. The elevated level of arterial pressure induced by the administration of methoxamine increased ventricular diameter and presumably oxygen requirements, and was deleterious to ischemic wall motion whereas the administration of norpinephrine reduced ventricular diameter and improved function. Intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation had little effect on either ischemic motion or perfusion. These experimental studies generally support conclusions drawn from clinical echocardiograms about the relationship of abnormalities of wall motion to coronary artery lesions and myocardial ischemia, and suggest further clinical uses for echocardiography in coronary disease.
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PMID:Echocardiography in experimentally-induced myocardial ischemia. 87 94

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.
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PMID:The wavefront phenomenon of ischemic cell death. 1. Myocardial infarct size vs duration of coronary occlusion in dogs. 91 39


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