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. 1994 Aug;83(8):571-6.

[Neurochemical studies of adrenergic reinnervation after heart transplantation]

[Article in German]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 7975807

[Neurochemical studies of adrenergic reinnervation after heart transplantation]

[Article in German]
J Ludwig et al. Z Kardiol. 1994 Aug.

Abstract

Heart transplantation causes sympathetic cardiac denervation. Measurements of plasma concentrations of the main presynaptic noradrenaline metabolite, dihydroxyphenylglycol (DOPEG, the plasma pool of which is exclusively neuronal in origin), were used to examine sympathetic reinnervation of the transplanted human heart. We determined arterial and coronary-venous plasma concentrations of DOPEG in 27 heart transplant recipients (transplant age ranging from 0.5 to 5 years) and in 9 control patients. In each of the control patients the DOPEG concentration was higher in coronary venous plasma than in arterial plasma (mean arterio-venous increment: 57.3 +/- 8.7%; p < 0.001). However, in heart transplant recipients, 18 out of 27 patients showed an arteriovenous increment in plasma DOPEG (mean increment in all patients 12.6 +/- 2.0%; p < 0.05). The ratio of the coronary-venous to arterial DOPEG concentration was positively correlated with the time after transplantation (p = 0.02 for individual results and p < 0.01 for mean group results). Thus, our data provide evidence for a time-dependent partial sympathetic reinnervation of the transplanted heart.

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