The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery
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J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · May 1988
Enhancement of crystalloid cardioplegic protection against global normothermic ischemia by superoxide dismutase plus catalase but not diltiazem in the isolated, working rat heart.
Oxygen-derived free radicals and intracellular calcium overload have been implicated as mediators of myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury. We hypothesized that free radical scavengers or calcium channel blockers could enhance the protection afforded the isolated, working rat heart by crystalloid cardioplegia against this type of injury at 37 degrees C. Hearts from 42 male rats in seven groups (n = 6) were studied in an isolated, working heart preparation measuring aortic flow (ml/min/gm dry wt), peak systolic pressure (mm Hg), coronary artery flow (ml/min/gm dry wt), and calculated coronary vascular resistance (dyne.sec.cm-5/gm dry wt). ⋯ We conclude that the addition of superoxide dismutase and catalase but not diltiazem to St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution can significantly enhance myocardial protection against normothermic ischemia/reperfusion injury. This implicates oxygen-derived free radicals as mediators of this type of injury.