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Left Ventricular Function After Ischemic CardioplegiaRole of Spontaneous Cardiac Hypothermia and the Bronchial Artery—Coronary Artery Collateral Circulation
Robert L. Reis, MD;
Rudolf N. Staroscik, MD;
Bradley M. Rodgers, MD;
Lee P. Enright, MD;
Andrew G. Morrow, MD
AMA Arch Surg. 1969;99(6):815-820.
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Previous experiments in this laboratory have demonstrated that ischemic cardioplegia results in depression of subsequent ventricular performance, the severity of which is a function of the duration of aortic occlusion. Contractility progressively improves with time, however, and if the period of occlusion is not longer than 30 minutes the contractile state of the myocardium frequently returns to near normal levels.1 These findings, in addition to the clinical observation that many patients appear to tolerate relatively prolonged periods of normothermic ischemic cardioplegia, suggest that adaptive mechanisms protect the myocardium during a period of aortic occlusion. The roles of spontaneous cardiac hypothermia and the bronchial artery—coronary artery collateral circulation in protecting the myocardium during periods of normothermic ischemic cardioplegia were determined in the experiments described in the following report.
Materials and Methods
Mongrel dogs weighing 19 to 24 kg (42 to 53 lb) were anesthetized with intravenously administered pentobarbital sodium (35
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
Bethesda, Md
From the Clinic of Surgery, National Heart Institute, Bethesda, Md.
Footnotes
Submitted for publication Aug 5. 1969.
Read before the 17th scientific meeting of the North American Chapter of the International Cardiovascular Society, New York, July 12, 1969.
Reprint requests to Clinic of Surgery, National Heart Institute, Bethesda. Md 20014 (Dr. Reis).
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