Myocardial reperfusion injury: experimental evidence and clinical relevance
- PMID: 7588916
- DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.eurheartj.a060991
Myocardial reperfusion injury: experimental evidence and clinical relevance
Abstract
Critically timed reperfusion is a prerequisite for survival of ischaemic myocardium. However, reperfusion may have an injurious component, which in experimental models appears to be mediated by reperfusion-induced augmentation of the inflammatory response and generation of reactive oxygen free radicals. Four expressions of myocardial reperfusion injury have been defined, i.e. reperfusion arrhythmias, post-ischaemic contractile dysfunction (myocardial stunning), coronary vascular and microvascular reperfusion injury, and acceleration of necrosis in irreversibly injured cells/precipitation of necrosis in reversibly injured cells. Mechanical and pharmacological reperfusion therapy is well established in clinical cardiology, and this article reviews the experimental data underlying the current view of myocardial reperfusion injury, and considers the clinical relevance of this phenomenon.
Comment in
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Myocardial reperfusion injury: experimental evidence and clinical relevance.Eur Heart J. 1996 Nov;17(11):1760-1. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.eurheartj.a014770. Eur Heart J. 1996. PMID: 8922932 No abstract available.
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