Evidence for a role of iron-catalyzed oxidants in functional and metabolic stunning in the canine heart

109Citations
Citations of this article
9Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Brief (15-minute) coronary occlusion and subsequent reperfusion lead to prolonged functional and metabolic abnormalities (stunned myocardium). Previous work suggests that one factor responsible for this phenomenon is oxygen-derived free radicals. The formation of the highly reactive hydroxyl radical requires the presence of metal ions, most importantly iron. In the present study, the effect of the iron-chelator deferoxamine on the recovery of segment shortening (%SS) in the stunned myocardium was compared with a control group in barbital anesthetized dogs. Deferoxamine (500 mg intra-atrially) was administered 15 minutes prior to and throughout 15 minutes of coronary occlusion. %SS, regional myocardial blood flow, hemodynamics, and myocardial high-energy phosphates were measured. Areas at risk, collateral blood flow, and all hemodynamic parameters were similar between control and deferoxamine-treated animals. While deferoxamine did not prevent the loss of systolic wall function that occurred during ischemia, deferoxamine significantly improved the recovery of %SS at all times throughout reperfusion (3-hour %SS of pretreatment: control, 12 ± 11; deferoxamine, 65 ± 12), normalized endocardial ATP (percent of nonischemic area: control, 79 ± 3%, deferoxamine, 93 ± 6%), attenuated the reperfusion-induced rebound increase in phosphocreatine and prevented the increase in tissue edema at 3 hours after reperfusion. Thus, deferoxamine exhibited a cardioprotective action both metabolically and functionally stunned myocardium presumably by decreasing the redox cycling, and hence, the availability of catalytic iron for use in hydroxyl radical formation and for the initiation of lipid peroxidation. These data suggest a possible role for the hydroxyl radical as a mediator of postischemic abnormalities in reversibly injured tissue.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Farber, N. E., Vercellotti, G. M., Jacob, H. S., Pieper, G. M., & Gross, G. J. (1988). Evidence for a role of iron-catalyzed oxidants in functional and metabolic stunning in the canine heart. Circulation Research, 63(2), 351–360. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.63.2.351

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free