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Reduction in experimental infarct size by recombinant human superoxide dismutaseinsights into the pathophysiology of reperfusion injury

 

作者: Giuseppe Ambrosio,   Lewis Becker,   Grover Hutchins,   Harlan Weisman,   Myron Weisfeldt,  

 

期刊: Circulation  (OVID Available online 1986)
卷期: Volume 74, issue 6  

页码: 1424-1433

 

ISSN:0009-7322

 

年代: 1986

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

To determine the importance of reperfusion injury and the ability of the free-radical scavenger recombinant human superoxide dismutase (h-SOD) to prevent it, open-chest dogs underwent 90 min of proximal circumflex coronary artery occlusion, and only at the moment of reperfusion received either h-SOD (400,000 IU bolus into the left atrium followed by a 300,000 IU iv infusion over 1 hr) or saline. After 48 hr the surviving animals were killed and measurements were made of the risk region (by postmortem angiography) and infarct size (by gross pathology). All measurements were made by investigators blinded to treatment given, and the code was broken only at the end of the study. Hemodynamic variables and collateral flow during ischemia were similar in the two groups. Infarct size in control animals (n = 8) averaged 22.4 ± 3.1% of the left ventricle and 52.2 ± 7. 1% of the risk region, compared with 13.3 ± 0.8% of the left ventricle and 33.6 ± 2. 1% of the risk region in h-SODtreated dogs (n = 8) (p< .05). Infarcts in treated animals were not only smaller, but also exhibited a distinctive “patchiness,” suggesting protection along vascular distributions. Furthermore, analysis of the relationship between infarct size and collateral flow measured during ischemia in the two groups indicated that protection by h-SOD was greatest in animals with the lowest collateral flows. This study supports the concept that reperfusion of ischemic myocardium results in a separate component of cell damage, presumably linked to the generation of oxygen free radicals on reflow. Since the h-SOD preventable reperfusion component of injury was most pronounced in hearts with the most severe ischemia, scavenging of oxygen radicals at the time of reflow may offer a novel and particularly promising therapeutic approach for the protection of ischemic myocardium.

 

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