Validation of local venous sampling within the at risk left anterior descending artery vascular bed in the canine left ventricle
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cardiovascular Research
- Vol. 21 (9) , 646-651
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/21.9.646
Abstract
The validity of using blood sampled from the anterior interventricular vein (AIV), anatomically located within the myocardium perfused by the left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery, to represent venous drainage originating from the LAD vascular territory was studied in eight anaesthetised, open chest dogs. The LAD was cannulated and perfused from a blood reservoir isolated from the systemic circulation. To determine the presence of blood from non-LAD sources that appears in the AIV sample, 51Cr-labelled red blood cells were injected into the left atrium and distributed in the systemic circulation while the LAD was perfused by non-radioactive blood. The percentage spillover of red blood cells from non-LAD sources into the AIV drainage was determined under control, reduced LAD flow, ischaemia, and reperfusion conditions as 100 × (AIV chromium content/arterial chromium content). Spillover of red blood cells into AIV blood samples averaged only 1.5(1.3)% under control conditions and increased insignificantly to 8.6(3.5)% during reduced LAD flow. During ischaemia red blood cells in AIV blood increased significantly to 98.3(5.0)% but decreased to 1.9(1.3)% after reperfusion. Studies in five dogs with microspheres showed that a portion of this admixture from non-LAD sources originated from precapillary nutritional collateral or overlapping blood flow. It is concluded that (a) blood sampled from the anterior interventricular vein accurately reflects venous drainage originating almost exclusively from myocardium perfused by the LAD under normal and low flow conditions and (b) reperfusion after transient ischaemia does not change the unique origin of AIV blood. This technique may therefore be used reliably to assess oxygen utilisation and metabolic variables in the myocardium perfused by the LAD.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- SUPERIORITY OF SURGICAL VERSUS MEDICAL REPERFUSION AFTER REGIONAL ISCHEMIA1986
- METABOLIC AND HISTOCHEMICAL BENEFITS OF REGIONAL BLOOD CARDIOPLEGIC REPERFUSION WITHOUT CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS1986
- Surgical Revascularization of Acute (1 Hour) Coronary Occlusion: Blood versus Crystalloid CardioplegiaThe Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1986
- Immediate functional recovery and avoidance of reperfusion injury with surgical revascularization of short-term coronary occlusion.Circulation, 1985
- Apparent improvement in canine collateral myocardial blood flow during vasodilation depends on criteria used to identify ischemic myocardium.Circulation Research, 1980
- V̇O2 of resting muscle during arterial hypoxia: Role of reflex vasoconstrictionMicrovascular Research, 1980
- GRADED FLOW REDUCTIONS AND O-2 CONSUMPTION OF SMALL PARTIALLY ISCHEMIC REGION OF DOG LEFT-VENTRICLE1979
- Redistribution of collateral blood flow from necrotic to surviving myocardium following coronary occlusion in the dog.Circulation Research, 1976
- Coronary sinus drainage and measurement of left coronary artery flow in the dogAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1964