Abstract

Pulmonary hypertension after cardiopulmonary bypass is a common problem in pediatric cardiac operations. This study tested the hypothesis that there is a difference between adult and immature pulmonary artery constrictor and dilator responses. Reactivity of pulmonary artery ring segments from 22 mature (15 to 19 weeks) and 15 immature pigs (4 to 5 weeks) was tested in a vessel myograph. Potassium as a receptor-independent vasoconstrictor and phenylephrine as an alpha-receptor-mediated vasoconstrictor were used to assess smooth-muscle vasoconstriction. To assess endothelial cell function (nitric oxide production and secretion), we used increasing concentrations of bradykinin or acetylcholine. Sodium nitroprusside was used to produce maximum smooth-muscle relaxation at the end of each experiment. The data demonstrated maturation-independent endothelium and smooth-muscle-mediated vasodilation. Pulmonary artery ring segments from immature pigs had significantly less KCl constriction compared with mature pigs (p < 0.05). In contrast, pulmonary ring segments from immature pigs demonstrated enhanced alpha-receptor-mediated constriction compared with mature pigs. These data may explain perioperative pulmonary vasoconstriction in pediatric patients.

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