Abstract

Coronary reactive hyperemia duration (RHD) and coronary blood flow debt repayment (BFDR) were compared in conscious dogs and ponies instrumented with coronary artery Doppler flow probes and pneumatic occluders. Additional ponies were instrumented with pacing electrodes. With the use of a Latin square design, eight animals of each species were subjected to a randomized series of nine coronary occlusions ranging from 5 s to 2 min in duration. In both species, postocclusion blood flow velocity rose rapidly and plateaued at similar peak levels relative to control, but in ponies this plateau lasted significantly longer. The interspecies difference in plateau duration increased as a function of coronary occlusion duration (COD). RHD ranged from 19.5 +/- 5.9 to 139.7 +/- 5.9 s in dogs and from 26.6 +/- 9.0 to 395.0 +/- 9.0 s in ponies. The slope of the RHD vs. COD curve was steeper in ponies. BFDR was similar in dogs and ponies at the shortest COD (418.1 +/- 26 vs. 451.4 +/- 58%) but declined in dogs as a function of COD to 232.3 +/- 26%. In ponies, BFDR increased as a function of COD to a maximum of 945.4 +/- 58% with a 60-s occlusion and then declined to 614.3 +/- 58%. RHD was not significantly altered in ponies when heart rate was changed to match that in dogs. Although the underlying basis for these interspecies differences in RHD and BFDR was not determined, the differences were considered to be too large to be explained by animal model differences in coronary conductance, collateral blood flow, or myocardial oxygen consumption.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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