Abstract

Stress-induced changes in the resistance due to coronary arterial stenosis of a fixed diameter and in the myocardial blood flow distal to the stenosis were investigated in the open-chest dog. Myocardial blood flow in the inner and outer third of the left ventricular wall was continuously measured with heated cross-thermocouples. The circumflex coronary artery was constricted with a thick string so that myocardial reactive hyperemia was nearly eliminated. Without constriction, a 15-second occlusion of the artery produced no significant changes in the resistance of large coronary arteries. On the contrary, in the presence of coronary constriction, a brief coronary occlusion caused a sustained decrease in distal coronary pressure and subendocardial myocardial flow during reactive hyperemia, while coronary flow returned quickly to the pre-occlusion level with significant reactive hyperemia of subepicardial flow. This change resulted in a long-lasting increase in the stenosis resistance. These results suggest that stenosis resistance changes dynamically, resulting in additional myocardial ischemia especially in the subendocardial myocardial layers.

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