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Regulation of myocardial oxygen delivery in response to graded reductions in hematocrit: role of K channels.
Citation | “Regulation Of Myocardial Oxygen Delivery In Response To Graded Reductions In Hematocrit: Role Of K Channels.”. Basic Research In Cardiology, p. 65. . |
Center | Indiana University |
Author | Alexander M Kiel, Adam G Goodwill, Jillian N Noblet, April L Barnard, Daniel J Sassoon, Johnathan D Tune |
Keywords | Anemia, Coronary, K ATP channels, K V channels, nitric oxide, Swine |
Abstract |
This study was designed to identify mechanisms responsible for coronary vasodilation in response to progressive decreases in hematocrit. Isovolemic hemodilution was produced in open-chest, anesthetized swine via concurrent removal of 500 ml of arterial blood and the addition of 500 ml of 37 °C saline or synthetic plasma expander (Hespan, 6% hetastarch in 0.9% sodium chloride). Progressive hemodilution with Hespan resulted in an increase in coronary flow from 0.39 ± 0.05 to 1.63 ± 0.16 ml/min/g (P < 0.001) as hematocrit was reduced from 32 ± 1 to 10 ± 1% (P < 0.001). Overall, coronary flow corresponded with the level of myocardial oxygen consumption, was dependent on arterial pressures ≥ ~ 60 mmHg, and occurred with little/no change in coronary venous PO. Anemic coronary vasodilation was unaffected by the inhibition of nitric oxide synthase (L-NAME: 25 mg/kg iv; P = 0.92) or voltage-dependent K (K ) channels (4-aminopyridine: 0.3 mg/kg iv; P = 0.52). However, administration of the K channel antagonist (glibenclamide: 3.6 mg/kg iv) resulted in an ~ 40% decrease in coronary blood flow (P < 0.001) as hematocrit was reduced to ~ 10%. These reductions in coronary blood flow corresponded with significant reductions in myocardial oxygen delivery at baseline and throughout isovolemic anemia (P < 0.001). These data indicate that vasodilator factors produced in response to isovolemic hemodilution converge on vascular smooth muscle glibenclamide-sensitive (K ) channels to maintain myocardial oxygen delivery and that this response is not dependent on endothelial-derived nitric oxide production or pathways that mediate dilation via K channels. |
Year of Publication |
2017
|
Journal |
Basic research in cardiology
|
Volume |
112
|
Issue |
6
|
Number of Pages |
65
|
Date Published |
12/2017
|
ISSN Number |
1435-1803
|
DOI |
10.1007/s00395-017-0654-x
|
Alternate Journal |
Basic Res. Cardiol.
|
PMID |
28965130
|
PMCID |
PMC5938743
|
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