Abstract

A standard experimental protocol was developed to explore the optimal technique for myocardial preservation during 120 minutes of ischemic arrest followed by 30 minutes of reperfusion. Eight different experimental groups were evaluated with the use of an in vivo pig heart preparation. The parameters measured included myocardial contractility and compliance, myocardial blood flow, and endocardial/epicardial blood flow ratio. Myocardial preservation was inadequate after hypothermic arrest alone, cardioplegic arrest alone (at normothermia), and single-dose cardioplegia plus hypothermia. Adequate myocardial preservation was found only after hypothermia and multidose cardioplegia with either potassium (35 mEq. per liter) or magnesium-procaine solutions. Continuous cardioplegia and hypothermia, while providing a moderate degree of myocardial preservation, was not as satisfactory as multidose cardioplegia and hypothermia. No difference in myocardial preservation was apparent when potassium-induced cardioplegia was compared with magnesium-procaine-induced cardioplegia.

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