Abstract
In a previous study, we found that recovery of segment shortening in the ischemic zone of conscious, chronically instrumented rabbits was significantly better in ischemically preconditioned than control animals after 72 hours of reperfusion. However, although this period of reperfusion was felt to be sufficient to allow recovery from stunning, regional function was disproportionately low for the size of the infarcts. To further characterize the recovery of left ventricular regional function, rabbits were chronically instrumented with a balloon occluder around a branch of the left coronary artery and a pair of ultrasonic crystals to monitor segment shortening in the ischemic zone. The preconditioned group had 1 cycle of 5-minute occlusion/10-minute reperfusion before a 30-minute occlusion, whereas control rabbits experienced only the 30-minute occlusion. All monitored segments were either dyskinetic or akinetic during the 30-minute occlusion. There was no difference in function between the 2 groups until 24 hours of reperfusion. At 72 hours, systolic shortening in control hearts averaged only 5% of the preischemic value, whereas shortening was 29% of baseline in preconditioned hearts. By day 21, systolic shortening averaged 26% in control hearts and 65% in preconditioned hearts (P<0.02) and appeared to have reached a plateau. Infarct size was 31.4+/-2.8% and 15.5+/-2.1% in control and preconditioned hearts, respectively. Moreover, in ischemically preconditioned hearts, the recovery of regional function was better than in controls for any given amount of microinfarction in the myocardial segment between crystals (P=0.02). The progressive improvement in preconditioned hearts is most consistent with favorable remodeling in the ischemic zone, which the preconditioning process seems to accentuate.
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