Organ arrest, protection and preservation: natural hibernation to cardiac surgery

被引:47
作者
Dobson, GP [1 ]
机构
[1] James Cook Univ N Queensland, Dept Physiol & Pharmacol, Sch Biomed Sci, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia
来源
COMPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY B-BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY | 2004年 / 139卷 / 03期
关键词
hibernation; torpor; cardioplegia; organ preservation; Xenotransplantation; heart; adenosine; lidocaine; hibernating myocardium; opioids;
D O I
10.1016/j.cbpc.2004.06.002
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Cardiac surgery continues to be limited by an inability to achieve complete myocardial protection from ischemia-reperfusion injury. This paper considers the following questions: (1) what lessons can be learned from mammalian hibernators to improve current methods of human myocardial arrest, protection and preservation? and (2) can the human heart be pharmacologically manipulated during acute global ischemia to act more like the heart of epsilon. hibernating mammal? After reviewing the major entropy-slowing strategies of hibernation, a major player identified in the armortarium is maintenance of the membrane potential. The resting membrane potential of the hibernator's heart appears to be maintained,close to its pie-torpid state of around - 85 mV In open-heart surgery, 99% of all surgical heart arrest solutions (cardioplegia) employ high potassium (> 16 mM) which depolarises the membrane voltage from - 85 to around - 50 mV. However, depolarising potassium cardioplegia has been increasingly linked to myocyte and microvascular damage leading to functional loss during reperfusion. Our recent work has been borrowed from hibernation biology and is focused on a very different arrest strategy which `clamps' the membrane near its resting potential and depresses O-2 consumption from baseline by about 90%. The new `polarising' cardioplegia incorporates adenosine and lidocaine (AL) as the arresting communication, not high potassium. Studies in the isolated rat heart show that AL cardioplegia delivered at 37 degreesC can arrest the heart for up to 4 h with 70-80% recovery of the cardiac output, 85-100% recovery of heart rate, systolic pressure and rate-pressure product and 70-80% of baseline coronary flows. Only 14% of hearts arrested with crystalloid St. Thomas' solution No. 2 cardioplegia survived after 4 h. In conclusion, maintenance of the myocardial membrane potential near or close to its resting state appears to be an important feature of the hibernator's heart that may find great utility in surgical arrest and cellular preservation strategies. Identifying and safely turning `off' and `on' the entropy-slowing gene > to down-regulate the hibernator's heart and applying this to human organs and tissues remains a major challenge for future genomics and proteomics. (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc: All rights reserved.
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页码:469 / 485
页数:17
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