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  • Title: Importance of platelets in myocardial injury after reperfusion in the presence of residual coronary stenosis in dogs.
    Author: Rousseau G, Hébert D, Libersan D, Khalil A, St-Jean G, Latour JG.
    Journal: Am Heart J; 1993 Jun; 125(6):1553-63. PubMed ID: 8498293.
    Abstract:
    Residual coronary stenosis is common after successful thrombolysis for acute infarction. We investigated the role of platelets and the influence of a residual critical stenosis during early reperfusion in survival of reperfused myocardium. The left anterior descending coronary artery was occluded for 90 minutes and reperfused for 6 hours in 5 groups of dogs, 3 with a residual critical stenosis (groups 1 through 3) and 2 without (groups 4 and 5). Thrombocytopenia was produced by an antiserum in groups 2, 3, and 5; group 3 was also made neutropenic by another antiserum. Platelets (groups 1 and 4) and neutrophils (groups 1, 2, 4, and 5) labeled with indium 111 were reinjected at occlusion. Collateral flow was estimated with radioactive microspheres and was statistically similar among groups. Infarct size (percentage of area at risk), revealed by triphenyltetrazolium, was more severe (49.4% +/- 4.0%; p < 0.05) with stenosis (group 1) than without stenosis (group 4: 29.5% +/- 4.6%). Platelet depletion reduced infarct size in group 2 (28.6% +/- 6.3%; p < 0.05 vs group 1) with stenosis, but not in group 5 without stenosis (24.5% +/- 6.2% vs group 4: 29.5% +/- 4.6%). Neutropenia (group 3) did not decrease infarct size in thrombocytopenic dogs. Neutrophil accumulations in reperfused myocardium were similar among groups, but platelets accumulated in greater numbers in reperfused infarcts with stenosis (group 1: 338,581 +/- 52,857/gm; p < 0.05) than without stenosis (group 4: 153,445 +/- 23,949/gm). Therefore a critical stenosis at reperfusion compromises myocardial salvage and increases infarct size by means of a platelet-mediated mechanism.
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