Abstract
The effect of hydroxyethyl starch-conjugated deferoxamine (HES-DFO) on the recovery of regional myocardial function after 15 min of coronary artery occlusion followed by 3 h of reperfusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery (stunned myocardium) was investigated in anesthetized dogs. Regional myocardial blood flow was measured by radioactive microspheres and regional myocardial segment shortening (%SS) by sonomicrometry. HES-DFO (equivalent of 50 mg/kg DFO), iron saturated HES-DFO (HES-FO), deferoxamine (DFO, 50 mg/kg), or saline were administered by intravenous infusion starting 30 min before occlusion and throughout occlusion. Ischemic bed size and collateral blood flow were similar in all four groups. HES-DFO significantly improved %SS in the ischemic-reperfused region during reperfusion; however, HES-FO and DFO had no effect on %SS as compared to the saline-treated group. HES-DFO and HES-FO had no effect on hemodynamics; however, DFO produced a marked reduction in systemic blood pressure. Since HES-FO had no effect on the recovery of %SS, the beneficial effect of HES-DFO is thought to be due to its iron chelating characteristics. Plasma concentrations of HES-DFO not only reached a higher peak level but also had a longer half life (3 h) than that of regular DFO (20 min). Thus, high-molecular-weight HES-DFO is effective in enhancing the recovery of regional wall motion in stunned myocardium. The reason for the lack of efficacy of DFO compared to HES-DFO at this high dose may be related to the formation of a toxic deferoxamine free radical species.
Published Version
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