Abstract

Necrosis of distal portion of skin flaps due to ischemia still remains a problem in plastic surgery. Following ischemia, a cascade of deleterious events including over-activity of Na+–H+ Exchanger (NHE) takes place. In present study we evaluated the effect of the potent NHE inhibitor, 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl) amiloride (EIPA) on ischemic tissue injury in a skin flap model, and investigated the role of mitochondrial ATP-sensitive K+ channels (KATP) in this phenomenon. Seventy-eight rats were randomly divided into thirteen treatment groups (6 rats each). Four groups received different doses of EIPA in the flap. EIPA/GLY group received an effective dose of a KATP channel blocker, glibenclamide (GLY, 0.3mg/kg) intraperitoneally (i.p.) 30min before raising the flap, and a local effective dose of EIPA (0.1mM) immediately after raising the flap. EIPA/diazoxide group (EIPA/DIA) received a sub-effective dose of diazoxide (7.5mg/kg i.p.) 30min before raising the flap and a local sub-effective dose of EIPA (0.075mM). EIPA 0.1 and 0.2mM significantly increased flap survival area compared to control group (56.01±6.1%, P<0.001). The protective effect of EIPA (0.1mM) was abolished by administration of glibenclamide (0.3mg/kg i.p.). Co-administration of a sub-effective dose of EIPA (0.075mM), with a sub-effective dose of diazoxide (7.5mg/kg i.p.) significantly improved flap survival (P<0.05). We demonstrated that the NHE inhibitor, EIPA can increase random pattern skin flap survival. Administration of diazoxide potentiates this effect, while glibenclamide abolishes that, implicating that the protective effect of EIPA is mediated through mitochondrial-KATP channels.

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