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Sevoflurane before or after ischemia improves contractile and metabolic function while reducing myoplasmic Ca(2+) loading in intact hearts. Anesthesiology 2002 Jan;96(1):125-33

Date

12/26/2001

Pubmed ID

11753012

DOI

10.1097/00000542-200201000-00025

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-0036137859 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   72 Citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ca(2+) loading occurs during myocardial reperfusion injury. Volatile anesthetics can reduce reperfusion injury. The authors tested whether sevoflurane administered before index ischemia in isolated hearts reduces myoplasmic diastolic and systolic [Ca(2+)] and improves function more so than when sevoflurane is administered on reperfusion.

METHODS: Four groups of guinea pig hearts were perfused with crystalloid solution (55 mmHg, 37 degrees C): (1) no treatment before 30 min global ischemia and 60 min reperfusion (CON); (2) 3.5 vol% sevoflurane administered for 10 min before ischemia (SBI); (3) 3.5 vol% sevoflurane administered for 10 min after ischemia (SAI); and (4) 3.5 vol% sevoflurane administered for 10 min before and after ischemia (SBAI). Phasic myoplasmic diastolic and systolic [Ca(2+)] were measured in the left ventricular free wall with the fluorescence probe indo-1.

RESULTS: Ischemia increased diastolic [Ca(2+)] and diastolic left ventricular pressure (LVP). In CON hearts, initial reperfusion greatly increased diastolic [Ca2+] and systolic [Ca(2+)] and reduced contractility (systolic-diastolic LVP, dLVP/dt(max)), relaxation (diastolic LVP, dLVP/dt(min)), myocardial oxygen consumption (MvO(2)), and cardiac efficiency. SBI, SAI, and SBAI each reduced ventricular fibrillation, attenuated increases in systolic and systolic-diastolic [Ca(2+)], improved contractile and relaxation indices, and increased coronary flow, percent oxygen extraction, MvO(2), and cardiac efficiency during 60 min reperfusion compared with CON. SBI was more protective than SAI, and SBAI was generally more protective than SAI.

CONCLUSIONS: Sevoflurane improves postischemic cardiac function while reducing Ca(2+) loading when it is administered before or after ischemia, but protection is better when it is administered before ischemia. Reduced Ca(2+) loading on reperfusion is likely a result of the anesthetic protective effect.

Author List

Varadarajan SG, An J, Novalija E, Stowe DF

Author

David F. Stowe PhD, MA, MA Emeritus Professor in the Anesthesiology department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Anesthetics, Inhalation
Animals
Calcium
Guinea Pigs
Halothane
In Vitro Techniques
Ischemic Preconditioning
Methyl Ethers
Myocardial Contraction
Myocardial Ischemia
Myocardial Reperfusion Injury
Myocardium