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Query: UMLS:C0599766 (
functional recovery
)
13,441
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The success of heart transplantation is limited by the negative correlation between the length of the cold ischemic storage period and the quality of
functional recovery
. We use 23Na, 31P NMR spectroscopy, and hemodynamic parameters to describe temperature-dependent changes in sodium influx and the concentration of
phosphorus
high-energy compounds during different storage periods. Perfusion with Krebs-Henseleit solutions containing Dy(TTHA)3- permitted discrimination of intra- and extracellular sodium during cold ischemic storage. The 23Na NMR visibilities under the acquisition and processing parameters used in our experiments were 40 +/- 4% for the intracellular compartment and 97 +/- 11% for the extracellular compartment. At 4 degrees C, the intracellular Na+ accumulation exceeded that observed at 15 and 22 degrees C. The ATP and PCr depletion rates were much lower at 4 degrees C and the left ventricular contractility was higher after longer periods of storage, as the storage temperature decreased. The intracellular Na+ concentration cannot serve as a marker for the postischemic recovery probability. The relative activity of the Na/K ATPase pumps is not correlated with the preservation success. However, intracellular sodium ion accumulation is a major factor in the time lag of the reperfusion recovery.
...
PMID:Sodium ion transport in rat hearts during cold ischemic storage: 23Na and 31P NMR study. 146 Nov 25
Depletion of high-energy phosphates, accumulation of inorganic phosphate and intracellular acidosis have each been proposed as important events in the transition from reversible to irreversible ischemic injury. To assess whether each variable is predictive of
functional recovery
on reperfusion, these were measured in the isolated isovolumic rat heart using 31P NMR. Perfused hearts were subjected to either 10, 12 or 40 min of normothermic ischemia followed by 40 min of reperfusion. Hearts were then freeze-clamped for further analysis of phosphate metabolites by NMR and ion chromatography. High-energy phosphates, Pi, phosphomonoesters and pH were measured by 31P NMR spectroscopy at 2 minute intervals. Heart rate and developed pressure were monitored simultaneously. All hearts undergoing 10 min of ischemia and 40% of hearts subjected to 12 min of ischemia demonstrated good
functional recovery
. The remainder of hearts ischemic for 12 min went into contracture on reperfusion with little return of function. Hearts subject to 40 min of ischemia went into ischemic contracture and showed no recovery on reperfusion. Intracellular pH, [ATP], and [Pi] measured prior to reperfusion did not predict the extent of recovery. However, phosphomonoesters were detected prior to reperfusion in all hearts that did not recover well, but were not observed in hearts that showed good mechanical recovery. Analysis of tissue extracts by 31P NMR and ion chromatography indicated that the most prominent components of the phosphomonoesters were glucose 6-phosphate, alpha-glycerol phosphate and AMP. In conclusion, of the various
phosphorus
metabolites that can be measured by 31P NMR, only one group, the phosphomonoesters, was predictive of
functional recovery
.
...
PMID:Predicting functional recovery from ischemia in the rat myocardium. 148 87
Although University of Wisconsin cold storage solution provides excellent preservation for the pancreas, the kidney, and the liver after extended cold ischemic storage, its ability to preserve the heart for extended cold storage periods is not yet proved. This study was carried out to evaluate the effect of University of Wisconsin solution on heart preservation and to compare it to modified St. Thomas' solution II with respect to the capacity to preserve high-energy phosphates and contractile function in pig hearts. Hearts were arrested with either University of Wisconsin cold storage solution or St. Thomas' solution II (10 ml/kg) and kept ischemic at 12 degrees C or 4 degrees C for 8 hours. Functional recovery after the preservation period was assessed by means of ventricular function curves of the isovolumically contracting Langendorff model perfused with modified Krebs-Henseleit solution.
Phosphorus
31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to monitor high-energy phosphates and intracellular pH during preservation and reperfusion. At 12 degrees C, hearts arrested and preserved with University of Wisconsin solution showed a rapid decrease in phosphocreatine and adenosine triphosphate. With St. Thomas' solution, phosphocreatine and adenosine triphosphate decreased slowly. Functional recovery was poorer with University of Wisconsin solution than with St. Thomas' solution. Hearts preserved at 4 degrees C with either solution showed no significant differences in high-energy phosphate content and
functional recovery
. Rigorous control of the low temperature (4 degrees C) is necessary when University of Wisconsin solution is used for heart preservation.
...
PMID:A comparison of UW cold storage solution and St. Thomas' solution II: a 31P NMR and functional study of isolated porcine hearts. 175 64
The common practice of using alkalotic cardioplegic solutions is not supported by experimental evidence. The present study was conducted to assess the effects of varying the pH (7.00, 7.40, and 7.70 at 20 degrees C) of a glutamate-containing cardioplegic solution on intracellular pH, high-energy phosphate content, and postarrest
functional recovery
and to compare the effects of various buffers (glutamate, bicarbonate, TRIS, and histidine) at a given pH (7.00 and 7.40). Isolated perfused rat hearts were subjected to 2 hours of cardioplegic arrest at 15 degrees C followed by 30 minutes of reperfusion. Intracellular pH and high-energy phosphate content were measured at 4 minute intervals by
phosphorus
31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. These data were correlated with postischemic
recovery of function
. There was no significant difference between the intracellular pH values recorded at the end of arrest in the three glutamate-containing groups. However, the acidotic solution (pH 7.00) resulted in better preservation than the alkalotic solution (pH 7.70), as evidenced by a higher creatine phosphate content at the end of arrest (61% +/- 9% of control values versus 30% +/- 9% [mean +/- standard error of the mean], p less than 0.05), a higher adenosine triphosphate content at the end of reperfusion (102% +/- 5% versus 82% +/- 6%, p less than 0.05), and a faster recovery of aortic flow (at 3 minutes of reperfusion, 91% +/- 11% versus 51% +/- 11%, p less than 0.05). Subsequent comparison of buffers showed that bicarbonate, TRIS, and histidine were equally effective in maintaining intracellular pH close to control values during arrest. Conversely, the use of glutamate resulted in a more pronounced fall in intracellular pH, which correlated with a better preservation of adenosine triphosphate and a better
functional recovery
than in the other groups. Overall, the greatest extent of preservation was provided by the pH 7.00 glutamate-containing cardioplegic solution. We conclude that additional protection can be conferred to the cold, chemically arrested heart by combining mild intracellular acidosis, which lowers metabolic needs during arrest, most likely through a limitation of calcium overload, and provision of glutamate, which may act as a substrate for anaerobic energy production while allowing intracellular pH to be kept within the appropriate range.
...
PMID:Influence of the pH of cardioplegic solutions on intracellular pH, high-energy phosphates, and postarrest performance. Protective effects of acidotic, glutamate-containing cardioplegic perfusates. 241 Jul 46
Magnesium-diltiazem cardioplegia was evaluated in the intact, perfused rat heart to determine whether the joint administration of these agents would adversely affect myocardial contractile and high-energy phosphate recovery following intermittent, normothermic global ischemic arrest. Sequential metabolic and functional analyses were performed on isolated perfused rat hearts during each phase of the experimental protocol: control (10 min), normoxic cardioplegia (10 min), intermittent global ischemic arrest (two 15-min periods separated by 2 min infusion of the normoxic cardioplegic perfusate), and normoxic postischemic control reperfusion (60 min). Four different cardioplegic solutions were evaluated: 30 mM KCl, 30 mM KCl with 2 mg diltiazem/liter, 20 mM MgCl2, and 20 mM MgCl2 with 2 mg diltiazem/liter. Myocardial phosphatic metabolite levels and intracellular pH were analyzed nondestructively in the intact hearts by
phosphorus
-31 NMR spectroscopy. Corresponding measurements of peak left intraventricular pressure, rate of peak pressure development (dP/dt), and contraction frequency were performed at the midpoint during each 5-min interval of 31P NMR signal averaging. Magnesium plus diltiazem-treated hearts were distinguished from all other groups by a marked delay in postischemic
functional recovery
consisting of a prolonged depression in contractility (34% of control, P less than 0.01) that persisted throughout the first 50 min of postischemic reperfusion. Diltiazem in combination with magnesium cardioplegia was detrimental to postischemic
functional recovery
, despite a rapid restoration of high-energy phosphate stores. The apparent adverse interactive effects of excess magnesium and diltiazem suggest that elective ischemic arrest with magnesium cardioplegia in combination with diltiazem may be contraindicated clinically. The mechanistic basis and drug specificity of this response require further clarification. The present findings appear to exclude ATP and PCr production, and structural causes as the basis for the observed aberrant
functional recovery
from global ischemia of magnesium plus diltiazem-arrested hearts.
...
PMID:Sustained postischemic cardiodepression following magnesium-diltiazem cardioplegia. 371 20
Contractile dysfunction in stunned myocardium could result from a decrease in the intracellular free [Ca2+] transient during each beat, a decrease in maximal Ca2+-activated force, or a shift in myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity. We measured developed pressure (DP) at several [Ca]0 (0.5-7.5 mM) in isovolumic Langendorff-perfused ferret hearts at 37 degrees C after 15 min of global ischemia (stunned group, n = 13) or in a nonischemic control group (n = 6). At all [Ca]0, DP was depressed in the stunned group (P less than 0.001). Maximal Ca2+-activated pressure (MCAP), measured from tetani after exposure to ryanodine, was decreased after stunning (P less than 0.05). Normalization of the DP-[Ca]0 relationship by corresponding MCAP (Ca0 sensitivity) revealed a shift to higher [Ca]0 in stunned hearts. To test whether cellular Ca overload initiates stunning, we reperfused with low-[Ca]0 solution (0.1-0.5 mM; n = 8). DP and MCAP in the low-[Ca]0 group were comparable to control (P greater than 0.05), and higher than in the stunned group (P less than 0.05). Myocardial [ATP] observed by
phosphorus
NMR failed to correlate with
functional recovery
. In conclusion, contractile dysfunction in stunned myocardium is due to a decline in maximal force, and a shift in Ca0 sensitivity (which may reflect either decreased myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity or a decrease in the [Ca2+] transient). Our results also indicate that calcium entry upon reperfusion plays a major role in the pathogenesis of myocardial stunning.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology and pathogenesis of stunned myocardium. Depressed Ca2+ activation of contraction as a consequence of reperfusion-induced cellular calcium overload in ferret hearts. 381 56
The ability of nifedipine to enhance myocardial protection was assessed on isolated perfused rat hearts subjected to 180 min of hypothermic (20 degrees C), global ischemia, followed by 45 min of normothermic reperfusion. Intracellular pH, ATP, Pi and phosphocreatine content were serially measured at 4 min intervals by
phosphorus
-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and correlated with simultaneously recorded hemodynamic parameters. Addition of nifedipine (0.075 mumol/l and 0.5 mumol/l) to Saint Thomas' cardioplegic solution reduced Pi accumulation during ischemic arrest and increased phosphocreatine levels during reperfusion. Post-ischemic
functional recovery
was not improved at a drug concentration of 0.075 mumol/l and was depressed at 0.5 mumol/l. These results clearly show that the presence of nifedipine in Saint Thomas' cardioplegic solution does not provide significant additional myocardial protection under hypothermic conditions.
...
PMID:Effect of nifedipine in hypothermic cardioplegia: a phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance study. 405 4
Previous studies from this laboratory utilized mass spectrometry to measure myocardial oxygen (PO2) and carbon dioxide (PCO2) tensions in isolated feline hearts subjected to periods of global ischemia and reperfusion. Myocardial carbon dioxide tension was found to increase during ischemia, and its rate of increase was found to correlate inversely with subsequent recovery of myocardial function following reflow. The present study utilized
phosphorus
-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to assess whether the severity of intracellular acidosis or the depletion of high energy phosphate stores would show a similar correlation with
recovery of function
. Hyperkalemic cardioplegia employed as a myocardial preservation technqiue in combination with hypothermia was compared with hypothermia alone as the control intervention. The experimental results demonstrated that intracellular pH fell to 6.09 +/- 0.13 with hypothermia alone and to 6.31 +/- 0.09 with cardioplegia plus hypothermia. Furthermore, myocardial ATP content fell to 22% +/- 2% of control with hypothermia alone, while falling to 36% +/- 4% of control with the combined therapy. Recovery of myocardial performance was found to correlate inversely with the severity of intracellular acidosis and depletion of ATP during ischemia. In contrast, no relationship was observed between preservation of phosphoryl-creatinine levels either during ischemia or after reflow and recovery of ventricular function. These results suggest that, similar to mass spectrometry, which allows monitoring of myocardial PCO2, 31P NMR permits the on-line monitoring of intracellular pH as well as high energy phosphate compounds, and thereby provides useful metabolic indices of the severity of ischemia. Since tight coupling was found between changes in these parameters and subsequent recovery of contractile performance, further development of 31P NMR for evaluation of techniques designed to minimize the severity of ischemic damage would seem indicated.
...
PMID:Mass spectrometry and phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance demonstrate additive myocardial protection by potassium cardioplegia and hypothermia during global ischemia. 677 61
Phosphorus
-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31P NMR) can estimate tissue intracellular pH as well as the content of high-energy phosphate metabolites in isolated perfused hearts. We used 31P NMR to examine mechanisms associated with the recovery of ventricular function in hearts subjected to global ischemia and reperfusion, with special emphasis on intracellular pH, a previously unreported variable. Single-dose and multiple-dose administration of a hyperkalemic cardioplegic solution were compared with hypothermia alone in 18 isolated perfused rabbit hearts. Hearts in group 1 were subjected to 24 degrees C hypothermia during 60 minutes of global ischemia; group 2 hearts received a single injection of 37-mM KCL cardioplegic solution at 10 degrees C at the onset of ischemia; and group 3 hearts received a similar initial cardioplegic injection followed by two subsequent 24 degrees C injections at 20-minute intervals during the ischemic period. Using an intraventricular balloon, maximal dP/dt provided a quantitative index of left ventricular performance before and after ischemia. Return of ventricular function expressed as a percentage of control was 54 +/- 11% for group 1, 84 +/- 6% for group 2, and 101 +/- 18% for group 3. Differences in the rate of development of intracellular acidosis were noted during the 60-minute ischemic period. Intracellular pH fell to 6.09 +/- 0.12 in group 1, 6.31 +/- 0.09 in group 2, an 6.79 +/- 0.03 in group 3. In all three groups intracellular pH returned to control (pH 7.20) within 10 minutes of reflow. The metabolic correlates of
functional recovery
appeared to be the tissue content of ATP at the end of ischemia and after reflow. ATP content at the end of ischemia was 22 +/- 2% of control in group 1 hearts, 31 +/- 4% in group 2 and 64 +/- 2% in group 3. After 45 minutes of reperfusion, ATP levels recovered to 33 +/- 9% of control in group 1, to 71 +/- 9% in group 2 and to 86 +/- 6% in group 3. Although there were no differences between groups in the content of creatine phosphate after 60 minutes of ischemia, the rates of creatine phosphate decline were dissimilar. Further, during the early reflow period, a marked overshoot in tissue creatine phosphate was detected, especially in groups 1 and 2. Histologic damage assessed by light microscopy correlated with the metabolic data, confirming that multidose cardioplegia provided the best preservation of cellular morphology. These results demonstrate that the magnitude of intracellular acidosis and the associated increase in inorganic phosphate correlate inversely with recovery of postischemic ventricular structure and function. ATP, but not creatine phosphate, content correlates with return of contractile performance after reperfusion. The overshoot in creatine phosphate during early reperfusion might impede optimal restoration of ATP content and, as a result, optimal recovery of cell functions.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of ischemic myocardial cell damage assessed by phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance. 679 21
Hypothermic potassium cardioplegia is now commonly used to protect the myocardium during surgically induced ischemia. Because the potassium-related membrane depolarization has been shown to increase calcium influx, we undertook this study to define the effects of varying the calcium content in hyperkalemic perfusates and the effects of using magnesium instead of or in addition to potassium as the arresting agent on the ability of hearts to recover normal function after ischemic arrest. We subjected isolated perfused working rat hearts to 60 minutes of cardioplegic arrest followed by 30 minutes of reperfusion, and measured high-energy phosphate levels every 2 1/2 minutes by
phosphorus
-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. These data were correlated with postischemic
recovery of function
. Our results show that potassium cardioplegia may be harmful when the calcium concentration is greater than 1 mM. The kalemic injury is significantly reduced when the calcium content is lowered to 0.25 mM and the greatest extent of preservation is provided by a calcium-poor perfusate (0.25 mM) containing 13 mM magnesium. The beneficial effects of magnesium are not enhanced by subsequent addition of potassium. Close correlations were found between all observed metabolic changes during arrest and the degree of recovery of contractile performance after reperfusion. We conclude that the ability of the myocardium to maintain or resynthesize high-energy phosphate after cardioplegic arrest may be an important determinant of postischemic mechanical performance. These results show that
phosphorus
-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy is a valuable method for evaluating interventions to reduce the severity of ischemic damage.
...
PMID:Evaluation of high-energy phosphate metabolism during cardioplegic arrest and reperfusion: a phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance study. 685 Oct 24
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