Abstract

Coronary occlusion (CO) of 1 h or longer causes transmural myocardial infarction (MI) in the rabbit. We studied how reperfusion of an infarct affected myocardial blood flow (MBF) acutely and after 3 wk of healing. CO was performed in rabbits for 60 or 180 min (n = 22) followed by reperfusion, and MBF to normal and infarcted zones was determined by radioactive microspheres. In a separate series (n = 23), MBF was measured at 21-25 days post-CO in three groups that had either permanent CO or reperfusion after 60 or 180 min of CO. MBF to the infarct was approximately 8 +/- 3% (+/-SE) of normal MBF (3.8 +/- 0.5 ml.min-1.g-1) during 60-180 min of CO but 3 wk later had increased to 33 +/- 6% of normal MBF (P less than 0.005). Reperfusion after 60 or 180 min of CO resulted in 74 +/- 6% and 41 +/- 5% return of normal MBF, respectively, but 3 wk later, MBF had decreased to 25 +/- 5% (P less than 0.001) and 24 +/- 4% (P less than 0.025) of normal MBF, respectively. Thus after 3 wk of postinfarction healing, MBF to the permanently occluded infarcts increased fourfold, whereas MBF decreased by 50% in the reperfused infarcts so that MBF to the scar tissue was comparable among the three groups and was not influenced by acute post-MI reperfusion.

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