Quinaprilat during cardioplegic arrest in the rabbit to prevent ischemia-reperfusion injury

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Abstract

Objectives: This study evaluated intracardiac angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition as an adjuvant to cardioplegia and examined its effects on hemodynamic, metabolic, and ultrastructural postischemic outcomes. Methods: The experiments were performed with an isolated, erythrocyte-perfused, rabbit working-heart model. The hearts excised from 29 adult New Zealand White rabbits (2950 ± 200 g) were randomly assigned to four groups. Two groups received quinaprilat (1 μg/mL), initiated either with cardioplegia (n = 7) or during reperfusion (n = 7). The third group received L-arginine (2 mmol/L) initiated with cardioplegia (n = 7). Eight hearts served as a control group. Forty minutes of preischemic perfusion were followed by 60 minutes of hypothermic arrest and 40 minutes of reperfusion. Results: All treatments substantially improved postischemic recovery of external heart work (62% ± 6%, 69% ± 3%, and 64% ± 5% in quinaprilat during cardioplegia, quinaprilat during reperfusion, and L-arginine groups, respectively, vs 35% ± 5% in control group, P

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Korn, P., Kröner, A., Schirnhofer, J., Hallström, S., Bernecker, O., Mallinger, R., … Podesser, B. K. (2002). Quinaprilat during cardioplegic arrest in the rabbit to prevent ischemia-reperfusion injury. Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 124(2), 352–360. https://doi.org/10.1067/mtc.2002.121676

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