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. 1981 Aug;241(2):H202-10.
doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1981.241.2.H202.

Early ischemia after complete coronary ligation in the rabbit, dog, pig, and monkey

Early ischemia after complete coronary ligation in the rabbit, dog, pig, and monkey

A H Harken et al. Am J Physiol. 1981 Aug.

Abstract

The character and extent of the myocardial ischemic "borderzone" was assessed in the rabbit, dog, pig, and monkey. A fluorophotographic technique permitting high resolution (+/- 50 micrometers) display of myocardial ischemia has been developed. Reduced intracellular NADH (ischemia) fluoresces and may be photographed while oxidized NAD (perfused tissue) does not. A coronary artery was ligated for 5 min in open-chest rabbits, dogs, pigs, and monkeys. A fluorescent dye was injected into the left atrium as a coronary vascular marker, and the tissue was quick-frozen. The ischemic margin was well seen and was jagged in all species. The distance from anoxic to perfused tissue (borderzone) was less than 50 micrometers in all species. A narrow "oxygen-diffusion zone" of nonperfused non-anoxic tissue is visible in isolated heart perfused with blood-free solution. The width of this zone is inversely related to myocardial oxygen consumption and is less than 50 micrometers in a working blood-perfused heart. We have not yet correlated the oxygen diffusion zone with the clinically defined salvageable borderzone. In dogs, collateral vessels provide a heterogeneous border to the ischemic region so that the canine ischemic pattern differs from that of pigs, rabbits, and monkeys.

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