Abstract

High organoprotective properties of a carbon monoxide (CO)–oxygen (O2) gas mixture were confirmed after prolonged (24-h) preservation of the papillary muscle and an isolated rat heart at 4°C. Hypothermic preservation in the high-pressure gas mixture (6 atm) provided efficient restoration of the contractile activity of the isolated rat heart after 24-h storage at 4°C. The isolated retrograde-perfused Langendorff heart performed physically relevant mechanical work, which was similar in duration to that of an intact control heart. Staining with triphenyltetrazolium chloride did not detect infarcted regions in the myocardium. After preservation, the heart tissue was highly capable of performing its function in a test for electrically stimulated contractile activity of papillary muscles. In the test group, The frequency–intensity relationship, the potentiation effect induced by a pause, and the response to stimulation with isoproterenol of test hearts generally corresponded to the parameters of a normal rat myocardium. A sheep heart, which is comparable in size and weight to a human heart, was for the first time successfully preserved using the gas mixture. Normal heartbeat was spontaneously restored after the start of perfusion in all experiments. Histology did not detect a significant difference between test and control sheep hearts. The normal tissue structure of the myocardium was preserved in the test hearts. The 24-h preservation achieved in the study was four times longer than the maximum allowable preservation time of standard static cold storage. The results obtained with the large laboratory animal heart model showed that the hypothermic preservation protocol is promising for prolonged storage of human hearts.

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