Absence of coronary vascular reserve in myocardium distal to a fixed coronary stenosis
- 1 February 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cardiovascular Research
- Vol. 21 (2) , 99-106
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/21.2.99
Abstract
In a study to test the hypothesis that vascular reserve is exhausted in the setting of a resting blood flow deficit, the left anterior descending or circumflex artery was cannulated and perfused from the left carotid artery. After reactive hyperaemia had been assessed a stenosis was produced with a screw clamp. In the first experiment a moderate stenosis (diastolic perfusion pressure 40 mmHg) was produced in the left anterior descending artery (three dogs) or left circumflex artery (three dogs). Blood pressure was held constant with aortic constriction during intracoronary adenosine infusion (6 μmol·min−1). The stenosis was then adjusted to the preadenosine perfusion pressure. In the second experiment the anterior interventricular coronary vein was also isolated and segment length crystals were placed in the ischaemic and non-ischaemic zones. Severe stenosis (flow reduction of at least 50% and evidence of decreased segmental shortening) was produced in the cannulated left anterior descending artery (eight dogs). Intracoronary adenosine was given with aortic pressure held constant by transfusion and coronary venous drainage. In the first experiment resting coronary flow (ml·min−1) decreased from 41(3) to 29(6) (p−1·min−1) decreased from 0.89(0.26) to 0.78(0.23) (p<0.05) with adenosine and then increased from 0.94(0.49) with perfusion pressure adjustment. Subepicardial flow tended to increase with adenosine, and increased further with stenosis adjustment. In the second experiment subendocardial, subepicardial, and coronary flow did not change with adenosine. Thus there was no demonstrable vascular reserve in any layer of myocardium with a resting flow deficit.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Persistence of coronary vasodilator reserve despite functionally significant flow reductionAmerican Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 1985
- Reduced regional myocardial perfusion in the presence of pharmacologic vasodilator reserve.Circulation, 1985
- Contrasting effects of nifedipine and adenosine on regional myocardial flow distribution and metabolism distal to a severe coronary arterial stenosis: observations in sedated, closed-chest, domestic swine.Circulation, 1984
- Contrasting effects of nifedipine and verapamil on myocardium and vascular smooth muscle at two levels of coronary occlusion in the dogAmerican Heart Journal, 1983
- Influence of coronary vasodilation on the transmural distribution of myocardial blood flow distal to a severe fixed coronary artery stenosisAmerican Heart Journal, 1983
- Progressive coronary vasoconstriction during relative ischemia in canine myocardium.Circulation Research, 1982
- Variable effect of nifedipine on myocardial blood flow at three grades of coronary occlusion in the dog.Circulation Research, 1981
- The role of autoregulation and tissue diastolic pressures in the transmural distribution of left ventricular blood flow in anesthetized dogs.Circulation Research, 1979
- Relationship between blood flow to ischemic regions and extent of myocardial infarction. Serial measurement of blood flow to ischemic regions in dogs.Circulation Research, 1976
- Regulation of Coronary Blood FlowPhysiological Reviews, 1964