Abstract

Isolated working hearts of 16 month old spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR, n = 8) and age matched Wistar-Kyoto (WKY, n = 8) rats were exposed to 30 min global normothermic ischaemia followed by 60 min reperfusion. The hearts were routinely perfused at an afterload level of 13.3 kPa and a preload level of 1.0 kPa. The control values of left ventricular pressure, its maximal positive first derivative (dP1v/dtmax), coronary flow per gram heart tissue, and release of lactate and enzymes such as lactate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase were comparable in both groups. WKY rat hearts ejected almost twice as much perfusate per gram heart weight as the SHR hearts. In pressure-flow curves, obtained during the control period in SHR hearts, cardiac output was independent of changes in afterload, varying between 10.7 and 18.7 kPa. In contrast, in WKY rat hearts increases in afterload resulted in a progressive decrease in cardiac output. Reperfusion of the SHR hearts after 30 min of global normothermic ischaemia resulted in a poor recovery of cardiac output (13% of the control values) and dP1v/dtmax (32%) compared with the values in the WKY rat hearts (66% and 91% of the control values respectively). Reactive hyperaemia was prominent in the WKY rat hearts but completely absent in the SHR hearts. During one hour reperfusion, SHR hearts lost 3.5 times more lactate dehydrogenase and 2.5 times more aspartate aminotransferase than the WKY rat hearts. Pressure-flow curves, obtained during the reperfusion period, showed modest recovery of myocardial function of the WKY rat hearts at the lowest afterload level tested but completely depressed myocardial function of the SHR hearts at all afterload levels. Heart tissue contents of adenosine triphosphate and creatine phosphate after one hour of reperfusion were lower in the SHR than in the WKY rats, but compared with native values a comparable percentage decrease was seen in both groups of rats.

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