Abstract

Lung transplantation is a challenging procedure. Following the process of ischemia-reperfusion injury, the transplanted pulmonary graft might become severely damaged, resulting in primary graft dysfunction. Additionally, during the intra-operative window, the right ventricle is at risk of acute failure. The interaction of right ventricular function with lung injury, is however, poorly understood. We aimed to address this interaction in a translational porcine model of pulmonary ischemia-reperfusion injury. Advanced pulmonary and hemodynamic assessment was used, including right ventricular pressure-volume loop analysis. The acute model was based on clamping and unclamping of the left lung hilus, respecting the different hemodynamic phases of a clinical lung transplantation. We found that forcing entire right ventricular cardiac output through a lung suffering from ischemia-reperfusion injury increased afterload (pulmonary vascular resistance from baseline to end experiment p <0.0001) and induced right ventricular failure in 5/9 animals. Notably, we identified different compensation patterns in failing versus non-failing ventricles (arterial elastance p=0.0008; stroke volume p <0.0001). Furthermore, increased vascular pressure and flow produced by the right ventricle resulted in higher pulmonary injury, as measured by ex-vivo CT density (correlation: pressure r=0.8; flow r= 0.85). Finally, RV ischemia as measured by troponin-T was negatively correlated with pulmonary injury (r=-0.76), however, troponin-T values did not determine RVF in all animals. In conclusion, we demonstrate a delicate balance between development of pulmonary ischemia-reperfusion injury and right ventricular function during lung transplantation. Furthermore, we provide a physiological basis for potential benefit of extracorporeal life support technology.

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