Effects of adenine nucleotide analogues on myocardial dysfunction during reperfusion after ischemia in dogs.
We examined effects of adenine nucleotide on ischemic myocardial stunning in dogs. Pentobarbitalanesthetized open-chest dogs were subjected to 20-min ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), followed by reperfusion for 30 min. Either saline, 5 mM 8-bromo-5'-AMP (tributyryl-AMP), or 30 mM N6, 2', 3'-tributyryl-5'-AMP (tributyryl-AMP), 5 mM 5-amino-4-imidazole carboxamide riboside (AICAr) as a positive reference, was infused at 0.1 ml/kg/min in the left femoral vein throughout the experiment. The myocardial contractile function was measured by ultrasonometry. The tissue levels of high-energy phosphates in the reperfused heart were determined. Myocardial contractile function assessed by % segment shortening (%SS) in the saline-infused group decreased during ischemia and returned toward the preischemic level during reperfusion but incompletely. A significant improvement in the %SS during reperfusion was observed in the 8-bromo-AMP- and AICAr-infused groups but not in the tributyryl-AMP-infused group. The magnitude of the protective effect of the drugs on myocardial contractility during reperfusion was 8-bromo-AMP > AICAr > tributyryl-AMP = saline. Only in the 8-bromo-AMP-infused group were the levels of ATP, ADP, and total adenine nucleotides in the reperfused heart significantly higher than those in the saline-infused group. The present result indicates that 8-bromo-AMP improves the ability of the heart to recover from ischemia and reperfusion associated with a significant restoration of ATP.[1]References
- Effects of adenine nucleotide analogues on myocardial dysfunction during reperfusion after ischemia in dogs. Nakai, T., Kano, S., Satoh, K., Hoshi, K., Ichihara, K. J. Cardiovasc. Pharmacol. (1996) [Pubmed]
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