Abstract

Historically, cardiac transplantation relied on cold static storage at 5 °C for ex vivo myocardial preservation. Currently, machine perfusion is the standard of care at many transplant centers. These storage methods are limited to 12 hours. We sought to evaluate the efficacy of hemofiltration and filtrate replacement in adult porcine hearts using normothermic heart perfusion (NEVHP) for 24 hours. We performed 24-hour NEVHP on 5 consecutive hearts. After anesthetic induction, sternotomy, cardioplegia administration, explantation, and back-table instrumentation, NEVHP was initiated in beating, unloaded mode. After 1 hour, plasma exchange was performed, and hemofiltration was initiated. Heart function parameters and arterial blood gasses were obtained hourly. All hearts (n=5) were viable at the 24-hour mark. The average left ventricular systolic pressure at the beginning of the prep was 36.6 ± 7.9 mm Hg compared with 27 ± 5.5 mm Hg at the end. Coronary resistance at the beginning of prep was 0.79 ± 0.10 mm Hg/L/min and 0.93 ± 0.28 mm Hg/L/min at the end. Glucose levels averaged 223 ± 13.9 mg/dL, and the lactate average at the termination of prep was 2.6 ± 0.3 mmol/L. We successfully perfused adult porcine hearts at normothermic temperatures for 24 hours with results comparable to our pediatric porcine heart model. The next step in our research is NEVHP evaluation in a working mode using left atrial perfusion.

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