Title of article
Neonatal myocardial oxygen consumption during ventricular fibrillation, hypothermia, and potassium arrest
Author/Authors
Michael E. Jessen، نويسنده , , Anwar S. Abd-Elfattah، نويسنده , , Andrew S. Wechsler، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Pages
6
From page
82
To page
87
Abstract
Background.
Many investigators have examined oxygen consumption in adult hearts under conditions that simulate those encountered during cardiac operations and those that approximate basal metabolism. Few studies, however, have addressed this issue in neonatal myocardium.
Methods.
Hearts from 3- to 9-day-old piglets were studied in a blood-perfused isolated heart preparation in working, empty beating, fibrillating potassium chloride-arrested (at 37°C and 15°C), and hypothermic (15°C) states.
Results.
Oxygen consumption (expressed in milliliters of O2 per 100 g of ventricular tissue per minute; mean ± standard deviation) was 6.69 ± 1.91 for working hearts and fell to 3.19 ± 1.08 for empty-beating hearts, 3.72 ± 0.84 for fibrillating hearts, 1.30 ± 0.34 for potassium-arrested hearts at 37°C, 0.37 ± 0.18 for hypothermic (15°C) hearts, and 0.32 ± 0.10 for potassium-arrested hearts at 15°C. All values were significantly different except the two obtained at 15°C.
Conclusions.
Vented fibrillating hearts used more oxygen than empty beating hearts. The addition of an arresting concentration of KCl did not lower oxygen consumption below that observed with hypothermia alone at 15°C. If potassium-based cardioplegia is incrementally beneficial in neonatal myocardial protection over that afforded by hypothermia alone, its effects cannot be explained by reduction in oxygen demand.
Journal title
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Serial Year
1996
Journal title
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Record number
613106
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