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Title: Quantitative two-dimensional echocardiographic assessment of regional wall motion during transient ischemia and reperfusion in the rat. Author: Hagar JM, Matthews R, Kloner RA. Journal: J Am Soc Echocardiogr; 1995; 8(2):162-74. PubMed ID: 7756001. Abstract: Nonlethal myocardial ischemia produces profound and long-lasting effects on regional ventricular function and metabolism (myocardial stunning) and protects against myocardial infarction from subsequent prolonged ischemia (ischemic preconditioning). Two-dimensional echocardiography (2DE) is an essential tool for quantitative analysis of regional and global left ventricular (LV) function during myocardial ischemia and reperfusion and the study of these phenomena. However, the inability to perform 2DE in the open-chest rat heart has seriously limited the use of this model. To investigate the effect of transient coronary occlusion on segmental wall motion and LV geometry, we employed a 20 MHz intravascular ultrasound catheter placed on the epicardial surface of the rat heart (n = 15) to yield 2DE images suitable for quantitative analysis. Three 2-minute left coronary occlusions were made, separated by 5 minutes of reperfusion, with imaging during occlusion and at 5 and 60 minutes of reperfusion. Ischemic and nonischemic wall thicknesses, LV cross-sectional area, estimated LV volume, and the fractional changes of these parameters were measured. In eight animals these values were also compared with necropsy measurements of wall thickness, LV cross-sectional area, and volume. LV and right ventricular structures were well visualized in short-axis cross-sectional images in all animals, and images suitable for quantitative analysis were obtained in 92% of the periods. Coronary occlusion caused immediate, marked LV cavitary expansion, which rapidly returned to normal by 5 minutes of reperfusion. Active systolic thickening of the anterior wall at baseline (47% +/- 3%) became passive thinning during occlusion (-6% +/- 2%) and recovered partially, to 30% +/- 3% at 5 minutes of reperfusion and 42% +/- 4% at 60 minutes (p < 0.0005 at 5 minutes of reperfusion vs baseline; p not significant at 60 minutes). Recovery of thickening after 5 minutes of reperfusion was not different after the first versus third occlusion (23% +/- 4% vs 30% +/- 3%; p = 0.19). Measurements made by 2DE correlated well with those made by necropsy, although wall thickness was slightly thicker by 2DE. We conclude that epicardial echocardiography with an intravascular ultrasound catheter provides quantifiable 2DE images in this model and yields accurate information on segmental wall thickening and ventricular geometry not available by other techniques. Left coronary occlusion in the rat is associated with marked global and segmental LV expansion, which rapidly reverses with reperfusion. Postischemic regional wall motion abnormalities are present after coronary occlusion as brief as 2 minutes and can be measured accurately. The effect of multiple brief occlusions is not cumulative.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]