The Thoracic and cardiovascular surgeon
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Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Apr 1995
The failure of retrograde continuous warm-blood cardioplegia to resuscitate cardiac function in experimental acute coronary artery occlusion and reperfusion.
The effects of retrograde continuous warm-blood cardioplegia (RCWBC) on myocardial preservation during surgical revascularization for acute coronary artery occlusion were investigated using an isolated in-situ dog heart model. The left anterior descending artery (LAD) was occluded for 60 minutes followed by 60 minutes of cardioplegic arrest and reperfusion after release of the coronary artery occlusion. Thirty one animals were divided into 3 groups according to the manner of cardioplegic arrest. ⋯ Corresponding to the functional data, myocardial pH in the occluded LAD distribution was not significantly increased by RCWBC. Although RCWBC maintained myocardial pH in the circumflex artery distribution at a significantly higher level than the other two groups of hearts undergoing cold crystalloid cardioplegia, RCWBC resulted in a substantial decline of myocardial pH in the right-ventricular free wall. These results suggest that RCWBC after 60 minutes of LAD occlusion may not provide a significant benefit in myocardial preservation compared to cold crystalloid cardioplegia delivered through either an antegrade or retrograde manner.