• J. Heart Lung Transplant. · May 1997

    Single lung transplantation for canine pulmonary hypertension.

    • M Okada, C Yamashita, H Nohara, H Yamagishi, H Wakiyama, and K Okada.
    • Department of Surgery, Kobe University School of Medicine, Chuo-ku, Japan.
    • J. Heart Lung Transplant. 1997 May 1;16(5):532-7.

    BackgroundIn spite of recent reports of the clinical application of single lung transplantation for pulmonary hypertension, there is little underlying experimental data because of the lack of a reliable animal pulmonary hypertensive transplant model. We have established a pulmonary hypertensive model in beagles with dehydromonocrotaline and have been able to measure cardiopulmonary hemodynamics accurately and use circulatory assists during procedures. The purpose of this study was to determine whether single lung transplantation could be performed after the protocol of clinical procedure.Methods And ResultsIn six control dogs, allografting was successfully completed without cardiopulmonary bypass. Because one pulmonary hypertensive recipient dog died of right ventricular failure during the procedure without cardiopulmonary bypass, we used bypass for allografting in five pulmonary hypertensive dogs. Cardiopulmonary bypass lowered pulmonary artery pressure, allowing pulmonary arterial clamping and avoiding right ventricular overload. All pulmonary hypertensive dogs undergoing bypass were successfully weaned from bypass, indicating a good hemodynamic response to transplantation. In pulmonary hypertensive dogs, transplantation resulted in significant decreases in systolic pulmonary artery pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance, and a significant increase in blood flow to the graft lung, whereas in controls the results were the reverse.ConclusionsThus we were able to show that hemodynamics improved after single lung transplantation with cardiopulmonary bypass in a new pulmonary hypertensive animal model. These relatively larger animals are valuable for further studies of single, double, bilateral, and heart-lung transplantation for pulmonary hypertension.

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