Abstract

The influence of ischemia on purine nucleotide and their catabolite concentration in human myocardium was investigated during surgery of acquired and congenital heart defects. This was compared with the influence of ischemia on rat heart. Concentrations of adenine and guanine nucleotides and their catabolites were measured in the extracts of heart biopsies taken at the onset of ischemia and at the time of reperfusion. The content of myocardial ATP in human heart decreased from the initial value of 22.3 +/- 1.1 to 14.6 +/- 1.5 nmol/mg protein and total adenine nucleotide pool decreased from 34.2 +/- 1.8 to 27.6 +/- 1.5 nmol/mg protein during the operation. Significant increases in myocardial concentrations of purine catabolites were also observed with the most prominent rise in inosine from below 0.5 at the onset of the ischemia to 3.0 +/- 0.5 nmol/mg protein at the time of reperfusion. A positive correlation was demonstrated between the concentration of purine catabolites in the heart at the end of ischemia with the decrease of both ATP and the total nucleotide pool. An interesting metabolic specificity of the ischemic human heart appeared to be only a small accumulation of inosine monophosphate (IMP). The increase of IMP in the rat heart after ischemia was several-fold higher. Thus, cardiac surgery of congenital and acquired heart defects was associated with a significant decrease in myocardial adenylate pool and a single biopsy collected at the end of ischemia seems to be sufficient to evaluate the extent of this metabolic and possibly functional impairment of the heart.

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