Abstract

Metabolic activity of the newborn pig heart was observed by means of a preparation that allowed isolated hearts to perform a physiologic work load. A 10-min period of retrograde aortic perfusion was followed by 60 min of recirculating perfusion in which bicarbonate buffer was infused into the right atrium and ejected from both ventricles at measured pressures and flow rates. The buffer was supplemented with either glucose (10 mM), lactate (20 mM), or pyruvate (20 mM), or was unsupplemented. Pressure development and ventricular outputs were stable through 60 min of perfusion with glucose, pyruvate, or lactate supplementation. Myocardial high-energy phosphate and glycogen contents were also stable. In hearts perfused without substrate supplementation, mechanical performance deteriorated after 30 min. Rates of substrate uptake and oxygen consumption indicated that either glucose, lactate, or pyruvate could serve as a primary source of metabolic energy. Minimal lactate production was observed when either glucose or pyruvate were present. These findings indicate that, despite recent emergence from the relatively hypoxic intrauterine environment, the well-oxygenated newborn pig heart did not depend on anaerobic metabolism of glucose for energy production at physiologic work loads.

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