• J Trauma · Sep 1984

    Muscle ischemia and hypothermia: a bioenergetic study using 31phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

    • A L Osterman, R B Heppenstall, A A Sapega, M Katz, B Chance, and D Sokolow.
    • J Trauma. 1984 Sep 1; 24 (9): 811817811-7.

    UnlabelledFollowing traumatic limb amputation it is common clinical practice to maintain the ischemic tissues in a hypothermic state until surgical reimplantation. Of all extremity tissues, muscle is the most sensitive to ischemia; it is therefore imperative that reperfusion be established before diffuse muscle necrosis. Although it has been shown both clinically and experimentally that hypothermia prolongs the viability of ischemic skeletal muscle, the presumed mechanism by which this occurs has not been confirmed at the cellular level. This study was undertaken to quantify the effect of conventional iced-saline hypothermia on anaerobic cell metabolism and high-energy phosphate depletion in traumatically devascularized muscle.MethodsPhosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P NMR) was employed to noninvasively monitor cellular phosphocreatine (PCr), ATP, and intracellular pH over time in ischemic cat hindlimb muscle under room temperature (22 degrees C) and 1 degree C hypothermic conditions.ResultsMuscular PCr depletion was significantly retarded by tissue hypothermia but the rate of ATP depletion was not. A progressive, severe cellular acidosis was observed in the room-temperature muscle. Iced tissue cooling produced a dramatic initial rise in cell pH which significantly reduced the absolute degree of subsequent acidotic changes.SignificanceThese findings question our understanding of hypothermic tissue preservation, which has generally been assumed to work on the basis of decreased tissue metabolism, thus conserving critical cellular ATP levels. The empirical benefit derived by cooling muscle in an iced medium may actually be related to the cellular alkalinization produced by tissue cooling, as this significantly mitigates the profound acidosis that would otherwise occur.

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