Hibernating myocardium: morphological correlates of inotropic stimulation and glucose uptake
Open Access
- 1 April 2000
- Vol. 83 (4) , 456-461
- https://doi.org/10.1136/heart.83.4.456
Abstract
BACKGROUND In patients with postischaemic left ventricular dysfunction, segments recovering function after revascularisation (hibernating myocardium) may not respond during dobutamine echocardiography, despite preserved [18F] 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) uptake at positron emission tomography. OBJECTIVE To investigate whether this lack of response might reflect the degree of ultrastructural change in hibernating myocardium. METHODS Transmural biopsies were obtained from 22 dysfunctional segments in 22 patients during coronary artery bypass grafting and examined by light and electron microscopy. Wall motion scores and coronary vasodilator reserve were assessed before and after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). RESULTS Mean (SD) wall motion score improved in all segments following CABG (from 2.24 (0.4) to 1.55 (0.4); p < 0.0001), confirming hibernating myocardium. In these segments myocardial blood flow (positron emission tomography with H2 15O) before CABG was similar to that in normal volunteers (1.02 (0.24) v 1.02 (0.23) ml/min/g), while the coronary vasodilator reserve was blunted (1.26 (0.7) v 3.2 (1.6); p < 0.0001). Myocardial blood flow was unchanged after CABG, whereas coronary vasodilator reserve increased to 2.10 (0.90) (p < 0.0007). In hibernating myocardium myofibrillar loss, interstitial fibrosis, and glycogen-rich myocytes were more marked than in control donor hearts. On the basis of the response to dobutamine before CABG, two functional groups were identified: group A, segments with inotropic reserve (n = 15); group B, segments without inotropic reserve (n = 7). FDG uptake was similar in group A and group B (0.40 (0.1)v 0.44 (0.1) μmol/min/g). In group B there was more myofibrillar loss (26 (8)% v 11 (5)%; p = 0.0009) and glycogen-rich myocytes (28 (11)%v 17 (10)%; p = 0.02), whereas interstitial fibrosis, myocardial blood flow, and coronary vasodilator reserve were similar in the two groups. Myofibrillar loss was the only independent predictor of inotropic reserve (p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS Hibernating myocardium is characterised by a reduced coronary vasodilator reserve which improves on revascularisation and shows a spectrum of ultrastructural changes that influence the response to dobutamine, while FDG uptake is invariably preserved.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hibernating Myocardium: A ReviewJournal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1996
- Combined low dose dipyridamole-dobutamine stress echocardiography to identify myocardial viabilityJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1996
- Residual coronary reserve identifies segmental viability in patients with wall motion abnormalitiesJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1995
- Chronic hibernating myocardium: Interstitial changesMolecular and Cellular Biochemistry, 1995
- Nuclear CardiologyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Dobutamine stress echocardiography: Correlation with coronary lesion severity as determined by quantitative angiographyJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1992
- Myocardial metabolism in ischemic heart disease: basic principles and application to imaging by positron emission tomographyProgress in Cardiovascular Diseases, 1989
- The effects of dopamine and dobutamine on regional function in the presence of rigid coronary stenoses and subcritical impairments of reactive hyperemiaAmerican Heart Journal, 1988
- Multivariate analysis of angiographic, histologic, and electrocardiographic data in patients with coronary heart disease.Circulation, 1984
- Post-extrasystolic potentiation of ischemic myocardium by atrial stimulationAmerican Heart Journal, 1978