Abstract

Preconditioning has been suggested as the most powerful mechanism of myocardial protection against prolonged ischemia. However, whether preconditioning offers additional benefits over cardioplegia during coronary artery bypass grafting is not known. Thirty patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting were randomized into two groups. After aortic cross-clamping, group 1 received antegrade blood and blood cardioplegia followed by normothermic retrograde blood cardioplegia (controls), whereas group 2 patients were subjected to 5 minutes of global ischemia followed by reperfusion with antegrade and retrograde blood cardioplegia (preconditioned). The transcardiac differences in oxygen saturation, pH, and lactate were measured during cardiopulmonary bypass. Myocardial biopsy specimens were taken from half of the patients for adenosine triphosphate determination. The extent of myocardial injury was estimated by monitoring the postoperative leakage of creatine kinase-MB and troponin T. Immediate hemodynamic recovery and postoperative complications were also observed. The 5-minute preconditioning induced marked lactate and acid production, and myocardial adenosine triphosphate levels tended to decrease. The heart continued to produce lactate and acid during retrograde cardioplegia, but the transcardiac pH and lactate differences were similar in both groups. Adenosine triphosphate level measured at the end of the cross-clamp period was decreased to a half and one third of the preclamp values in the control and preconditioned groups, respectively. The postoperative creatine kinase-MB and troponin T effluxes tended to be more elevated in the preconditioned group, yet hemodynamic recovery and the number of postoperative complications were similar in both groups. The results show that a 5-minute preconditioning ischemia does not offer any additional benefits over normothermic retrograde blood cardioplegia during coronary artery bypass grafting.

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