The Journal of surgical research
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We have previously reported that atrial trabeculae from patients taking oral sulfonylurea hypoglycemic agents cannot be preconditioned by transient ischemia, which may, in part, explain the increased cardiovascular mortality historically associated with the use of these agents (J. C. Cleveland et al., 1997, Circulation 96, 29-32). ⋯ Ca(2+) pretreatment increased postischemic human myocardial developed force to 35.3 +/- 2.9 %BDF in these patients (P < 0.05 vs I/R, ANOVA and Bonferroni/Dunn). We conclude that atrial muscle from patients taking oral hypoglycemic agents can be preconditioned with exogenous Ca(2+). This therapy may offer a clinically relevant means to precondition the myocardium of diabetics taking oral hypoglycemic agents prior to clinical interventions such as coronary angioplasty or cardiac bypass.
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Hypervolemic hemodilution has been proposed as an alternative to normovolemic hemodilution to reduce homologous blood transfusions. So far, convincing data supporting this concept are unknown. ⋯ Thus, hypervolemic hemodilution cannot replace normovolemic hemodilution to reduce homologous transfusions, but for blood losses <40% of blood volume hypervolemic hemodilution appears to be superior.
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21-Aminosteroids are potent anti-inflammatory and antioxidant drugs that provide remarkable endothelial protection in different models of tissue ischemia-reperfusion and inflammation. The effects of 21-aminosteroids in sepsis, a highly inflammatory condition leading to panendothelial activation and injury, are largely uninvestigated. We therefore explored the effects of the 21-aminosteroid U74386G on hepatic blood flow, endothelial cell function, and sinusoidal structure in a canine model of fluid-resuscitated, hyperdynamic endotoxic shock. ⋯ U74389G can preserve the functional and structural integrity of endothelial cells in the hepatic sinusoid during hyperdynamic endotoxic shock. This endothelial-protective effect was associated with a better maintained hepatic blood flow and a significant attenuation of inflammatory liver injury.