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  • Title: Effects of calcium concentration, lactobionate content, and sodium/ potassium ratio of preservation solutions on resting left ventricular pressure and postreperfusion function of rabbit heterotopic heart transplants.
    Author: Termignon JL, Pradier F, Petit A, Journois D, Weiss M, Mazmanian M.
    Journal: J Heart Lung Transplant; 1995; 14(6 Pt 1):1126-35. PubMed ID: 8719460.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: We tested the hypothesis that the University of Wisconsin solution has a ionic composition (i.e., intracellular, calcium-free, lactobionate-enriched) that may be beneficial for cold heart graft preservation independently from any additives. METHODS: St. Thomas' Hospital and University of Wisconsin solutions were compared with the following: (1) C solution, a simplified University of Wisconsin-like solution (i.e., intracellular, calcium-free, lactobionate-enriched); (2) A solution, an St. Thomas' Hospital-like solution (extracellular, calcium [Ca2+] = 1.2 mmol/L) in which chloride was replaced by lactobionate; (3) B solution, an intracellular, lactobionate-enriched, calcium-containing solution ([Ca2+] = 1.2 mmol/L). Rabbit hearts were transplanted heterotopically in the abdomen of recipient animals either immediately or after 6 hours of storage. Hemodynamic parameters were recorded 60 minutes after unclamping. RESULTS: After a 6-hour storage, University of Wisconsin and C solutions provided better preservation than B and St. Thomas' Hospital solutions: diastolic pressures were lower; developed pressure and rate of pressure rise were higher. C solution was superior to University of Wisconsin solution only for rate of pressure rise. A solution was intermediary. A significant alteration of resting pressure and hemodynamic parameters was generally observed during the 6-hour storage. Nonsignificant changes of developed pressure and rate of pressure rise were only observed in C and B solutions: This is explained by systolic alteration after immediate reimplantation for the B group and good preservation for the C group. Resting pressure was unchanged over a 6-hour storage only for the C group, but this measure was not determined for University of Wisconsin. A correlation exists for various left ventricular volumes between resting pressure and postreperfusion hemodynamic data. Replacement of chloride by lactobionate (A versus St. Thomas' Hospital) may have improved resting and diastolic pressures by other mechanisms than limitation of net water gain during storage.
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