STUDIES OF MYOCARDIAL PROTECTION IN THE IMMATURE HEART .1. ENHANCED TOLERANCE OF IMMATURE VERSUS ADULT MYOCARDIUM TO GLOBAL-ISCHEMIA WITH REFERENCE TO METABOLIC DIFFERENCES

  • 1 December 1990
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 100 (6), 879-887
Abstract
This study compares the metabolism and functional responses of adult and immature hearts to a standard ischemic insult. Ten adult dogs (25 to 27 kg) and 10 puppies (6 to 10 weeks old) underwent 45 minutes of aortic clamping on bypass. Preoperative and postoperative ventricular performance (Starling curves), biochemical factors, and water content were measured. Global ischemia in adults produced a 30% mortality rate (3/10) and low output syndrome in survivors (33% recovery of stroke work index). Conversely, all puppies survived and stroke work index returned to 85% of control, with less edema developing (0.4% versus 2% water gain, p < 0.05). Puppies expended comparable glycogen stores but used more glutamate (15.4 versus 8.6 .mu.mol/gm dry weight), produced more alanine (18.9 versus 6.4 .mu.mol, p < 0.05), succinate (19 versus 8.2 .mu.mol, p < 0.05), and malate (2.6 versus 0.15 .mu.mol, p < 0.05) during ischemia, and recovered better postischemic aerobic metabolism (410 versus 255 nmol tissue pyruvate, p < 0.05). We conclude that tolerance of immature hearts to ischemia is related to amino acid utilization by transamination and increased substrate level phosphorylation, as occurring in diving mammals, suggesting retention of intrautero adaptive mechanisms.