Influence of mannitol on maintaining coronary flows and salvaging myocardium during ventriculotomy and during prolonged coronary artery ligation.
- 31 August 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 56 (3) , 340-346
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.56.3.340
Abstract
We investigated whether prolonged infusion of hypertonic mannitol results in a sustained increase in coronary flow and reduces myocardial necrosis after ventriculotomy or two hours of circumflex coronary artery occlusion. Cardiac outputs, intracardiac pressures, and heart rates did not differ between mannitol and control animals. Those receiving mannitol after ventriculotomy had coronary flows to myocardium near the incision which did not differ from controls. During coronary occlusion, mannitol did increase flow to ischemic and peri-ischemic regions by one hour, but this increase was not sustained at two hours. On histologic examination, myocardial necrosis involving the right ventricular free wall in the ventriculotomy animals and the posterior papillary muscle and subadjacent free wall in the coronary occlusion animals, did not differ between the mannitol treated and control groups. The data obtained in the present study, combined with those from earlier evaluations of the influence of mannitol during ventriculotomy and myocardial ischemia, suggest that mannitol's ability to increase coronary flow to injured areas of myocardium is relatively short-lived.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The protective effect of hyperosmotic mannitol in myocardial ischemia and necrosis.Circulation, 1976
- Effect of hypertonic mannitol and isoproterenol on regional coronary flow following right ventriculotomy.Circulation, 1976
- The Circulation of the Fetus in UteroCirculation Research, 1967