The American journal of cardiology
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Comparative Study
Maximal revascularization (reperfusion) in intact conscious dogs after 2 to 5 hours of coronary occlusion.
Acute infarction was produced in intact conscious dogs by inflating a previously implanted balloon cuff around the left anterior descending coronary artery was occluded in 26 control dogs and reperfused by deflating the balloon cuff after 2 hours of occlusion in 19 dogs (group II) and after 5 hours in 11 dogs (group III). Serial studies were performed and repeated after 48 hours and 7 days. All three groups revealed hemodynamic and metabolic deterioration with coronary occlusion and infarct production. ⋯ Infarct size was more than 15 percent of ventricular mass in 92 percent of control dogs and in 100 percent of dogs in group III, but in only 50 percent of those in group II. The data indicate that reperfusion in conscious dogs representing early, noninvasive maximal revascularization under ideal circumstances fails to prevent deterioration or death; instead it hastens the development of arrhythmias and myocardial injury. Reperfusion, although deleterious in the first hours, can reduce infarct size if performed after 2 hours, but not after 5 hours, of occlusion.