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Local metabolic hypothesis is not sufficient to explain coronary autoregulatory behavior.

Citation
Kiel, A. M., et al. “Local Metabolic Hypothesis Is Not Sufficient To Explain Coronary Autoregulatory Behavior.”. Basic Research In Cardiology, p. 33.
Center Indiana University
Author Alexander M Kiel, Adam G Goodwill, Hana E Baker, Gregory M Dick, Johnathan D Tune
Keywords Autoregulation, Coronary, Swine, Zero-flow pressure
Abstract

The local metabolic hypothesis proposes that myocardial oxygen tension determines the degree of autoregulation by increasing the production of vasodilator metabolites as perfusion pressure is reduced. Thus, normal physiologic levels of coronary venous PO, an index of myocardial oxygenation, are proposed to be required for effective autoregulation. The present study challenged this hypothesis through determination of coronary responses to changes in coronary perfusion pressure (CPP 140-40 mmHg) in open-chest swine in the absence (n = 7) and presence of euvolemic hemodilution (~ 50% reduction in hematocrit), with (n = 5) and without (n = 6) infusion of dobutamine to augment MVO. Coronary venous PO decreased over similar ranges (~ 28-15 mmHg) as CPP was lowered from 140 to 40 mmHg in each of the groups. However, coronary venous PO was not associated with changes in coronary blood flow (r = - 0.11; P = 0.29) or autoregulatory gain (r = - 0.29; P = 0.12). Coronary zero-flow pressure (Pzf) was measured in 20 mmHg increments and determined to be directly related to vascular resistance (r = 0.71; P < 0.001). Further analysis demonstrated that changes in coronary blood flow remained minimal at Pzf > 20 mmHg, but progressively increased as Pzf decreased below this threshold value (r = 0.68; P < 0.001). Coronary Pzf was also positively correlated with autoregulatory gain (r = 0.43; P = 0.001). These findings support that coronary autoregulatory behavior is predominantly dependent on an adequate degree of underlying vasomotor tone, independent of normal myocardial oxygen tension.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Basic research in cardiology
Volume
113
Issue
5
Number of Pages
33
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1435-1803
DOI
10.1007/s00395-018-0691-0
Alternate Journal
Basic Res. Cardiol.
PMID
30073416
PMCID
PMC6616530
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