Abstract
Using an isolated rat heart preparation (Langendorff perfusion, perfusion pressure 100 cm H2O) the correlation between the high-energy phosphate content and various left ventricular (lv) functional parameters of the hypertrophied heart (spontaneous hypertensive rats lv/body weight ratio 3.6 +/- 0.5 x 10(-3) was determined after normo- (30 min) and hypothermic (25 degrees C, 120 min) cardioplegic arrest and reperfusion, and compared with normal hearts (Wistar rats lv/body weight ratio 2.0 +/- 0.3 x 10(-3). St. Thomas Hospital solution was used as the cardioplegic agent. Before ischemia hypertrophied hearts had a significantly higher developed left ventricular pressure, pressure rate product and dp/dtmax, but a significantly lower ATP and total adenine nucleotide content. Irrespective of the mode and temperature of cardiac arrest there was a strong correlation both for normal and for hypertrophied hearts between the high-energy phosphate content expressed as ATP, total adenine nucleotides or the "energy charge" and the left ventricular functional parameters pressure rate product and dp/dtmax. The correlation coefficient ranged from 0.80 to 0.89 and was highest when the ATP content was plotted against pressure rate product (r = 0.89). There was a different slope for normal and hypertrophied hearts with a steeper decline of the left ventricular function in hypertrophied hearts for any given reduction of the myocardial adenine nucleotide content. Our results indicate that a similar reduction of the ATP or total adenine nucleotide content in both the normal and hypertrophied heart reduces left ventricular function to a greater degree in the hypertrophied heart.
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