Biventricular cardiac dysfunction after acute massive pulmonary embolism in the rat.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalJournal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)
Year 2001
Cardiac dysfunction has been documented in vivo after acute massive pulmonary embolism (AMPE). The present study tests whether intrinsic ventricular dysfunction occurs in rat hearts isolated after AMPE. AMPE was induced in spontaneously breathing ketamine-xylazine-anesthetized rats by thrombus infusion until mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) was approximately 40% of basal measurement. A hypotensive control group underwent controlled blood withdrawal to produce MAP approximately 40% of basal levels. Shams underwent identical surgical and anesthesia preparation but without pulmonary embolization. Hearts were perfused in isovolumetric mode, and simultaneous right ventricular (RV) and left ventricular (LV) pressures were measured. AMPE caused arterial hypotension with hypoxemia (PO(2) = 50 +/- 14 Torr), acidemia (pH = 7.26 +/- 0.11), and high lactate concentration (6.9 +/- 1.7 mM). Starling curves from both ventricles demonstrated that AMPE significantly reduced ex vivo systolic contractile function in the RV (P = 0.031) and LV (P = 0.008) compared with both the hypotensive control and sham hearts. AMPE did not alter coronary flow or compliance in either ventricle. Soluble tumor necrosis factor-alpha decreased in the RV (P = 0.043) and LV (P = 0.005) tissue. These data support the hypothesis that AMPE produces intrinsic biventricular dysfunction and suggest that arterial hypotension is not the principal mechanism of this dysfunction.
Epistemonikos ID: f3dde1d76b9a5aa1ae41512eaf75054a613f41df
First added on: May 24, 2023