Coronary microcirculatory vasoconstriction is heterogeneously distributed in acutely ischemic myocardium
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2005
Abstract:
The classical
model of coronary physiology implies the presence of maximal
microcirculatory vasodilation during myocardial ischemia. However,
Doppler monitoring of coronary blood flow (CBF) documented severe
microcirculatory vasoconstriction during pacing-induced ischemia in
patients with coronary artery disease. This study investigates the
mechanisms that underlie this paradoxical behavior in nine patients
with stable angina and single-vessel coronary disease who were
candidates for stenting. While transstenotic pressures were continuously
monitored, input CBF (in ml/min) to the poststenotic myocardium
was measured by Doppler catheter and angiographic crosssectional
area. Simultaneously, specific myocardial blood flow (MBF,
in mlmin1 g1) was measured by 133Xe washout. Perfused tissue
mass was calculated as CBF/MBF. Measurements were obtained at
baseline, during pacing-induced ischemia, and after stenting. CBF and
distal coronary pressure values were also measured during pacing
with intracoronary adenosine administration. During pacing, CBF
decreased to 64 24% of baseline and increased to 265 100% of
ischemic flow after adenosine administration. In contrast, pacing
increased MBF to 184 66% of baseline, measured as a function of
the increased rate-pressure product (r 0.69; P 0.05). Thus, during
pacing, perfused myocardial mass drastically decreased from 30 23
to 12 11 g (P 0.01). Distal coronary pressure remained stable
during pacing but decreased after adenosine administration. Stenting
increased perfused myocardial mass to 39 23 g (P 0.05 vs.
baseline) as a function of the increase in distal coronary pressure (r
0.71; P 0.02). In conclusion, the vasoconstrictor response to
pacing-induced ischemia is heterogeneously distributed and excludes
a tissue fraction from perfusion. Within perfused tissue, the metabolic
demand still controls the vasomotor tone.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
coronary artery disease; microcirculation; tracer kinetic methods
Elenco autori:
Marini, Cecilia
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