Combination therapy for maximal myocardial infarct size reduction.
Authors:
Journal: Heart disease (Hagerstown, Md.)
Publication Type: Comparative Study
Date: 2001
DOI: 10.1097/00132580-200111000-00002
ID: 11975818
Abstract
The aim of this study was to test whether myocardial infarct size reduction would be optimized by combining three known effective therapies: cariporide, regional hypothermia, and ischemic preconditioning (CHIP). Before coronary artery occlusion (CAO), treated rabbits (CHIP, n = 7) received cariporide (0.3 mg/kg), ischemic preconditioning (7 minutes ischemia and 5 minutes reperfusion), then 20 minutes of mild regional hypothermia (34 degrees C). Control rabbits (n = 7) received saline and a 34-minute waiting period. All received 30 minutes of CAO and reperfusion. In another study, rabbits (n = 8 in each group) received 90 minutes of CAO. In the 30-minute protocol, the authors found that hearts in both groups were equally ischemic during CAO. Mean ischemic risk zones were similar in both groups; however, in CHIP hearts, infarct size was 4 +/- 1% of risk zone, a reduction of 91% compared with control rabbits (44 +/- 7% of the risk zone, P = 0.001). In the 90-minute protocol, risk zone size was similar in both groups, but infarct size in control hearts was 76 +/- 3% of the risk zone compared with 34 +/- 7% in CHIP treated hearts (P = 0.0003). In summary, the combined treatment provided extraordinary protection. Infarct comprised only 4% of the risk region after 30-minute ischemia-a far greater reduction than was previously observed in the same laboratory using any single intervention. After 90 minutes of ischemia, infarct was 55% lower in CHIP hearts, suggesting that this therapeutic approach dramatically reduces ischemia/reperfusion cell death, even during long occlusions.
Chemical List
- Anti-Arrhythmia Agents|||Guanidines|||Sulfones|||cariporide