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. 1999 Nov;68(5):1567-72.
doi: 10.1016/s0003-4975(99)01041-3.

Bradykinin pretreatment improves ischemia tolerance of the rabbit heart by tyrosine kinase mediated pathways

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Bradykinin pretreatment improves ischemia tolerance of the rabbit heart by tyrosine kinase mediated pathways

J Feng et al. Ann Thorac Surg. 1999 Nov.

Abstract

Background: Depressed myocardial performance is an important clinical problem after open-heart surgery. We hypothesized that: (1) pretreating the heart with bradykinin improves postischemic performance, and (2) bradykinin activates protein tyrosine kinase (TK).

Methods: Twenty-seven adult rabbit hearts underwent retrograde perfusion with Krebs-Henseleit buffer (KHB) followed by 50 min of 37 degrees C cardioplegic ischemia with St. Thomas' cardioplegia solution (StTCP). Ten control hearts received no pretreatment. Ten bradykinin-pretreated hearts received a 10-minute infusion of 0.1 microM bradykinin-enriched KHB and cardioplegic arrest with 0.1 microM bradykinin-enriched StTCP. Seven others received 40 microM Genistein (Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA), a selective inhibitor of TK, added to both the 0.1-microM bradykinin-enriched KHB and 0.1-microM bradykinin-enriched StTCP solutions.

Results: Bradykinin pretreatment significantly improved postischemic myocardial performance and coronary flow (CF) compared with control (left ventricular developed pressure: 53 +/- 5 vs 27 +/- 4 mm Hg; +dP/dt(max): 1,025 +/- 93 vs 507 +/- 85 mm Hg/s; CF: 31 +/- 3 vs 22 +/- 2 mL/min; p < 0.05). Inhibition of TK with Genistein prevented this improvement in myocardial function, resulting in recovery equivalent to untreated controls.

Conclusions: Bradykinin pretreatment may be an important new strategy for improving myocardial protection during heart surgery. The molecular mechanism of action may be similar to those activated by ischemic preconditioning.

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