Literature DB >> 11471655

Determinants and prognostic value of ischemic necrosis in early biopsies following heart transplant.

S Esposito1, C Maiello, A Renzulli, L Agozzino, L S De Santo, G P Romano, A Della Corte, C Amarelli, C Marra, B Giannolo, J Marmo, M Cotrufo.   

Abstract

To evaluate the impact of early ischemic necrosis (IN) on the early and late outcome of heart transplantation, we reviewed our 11-year experience. Between January 1988 and June 1999, 207 heart transplants were performed in 205 patients (174 male and 31 female). Criteria for donor and recipient selection, and protocols for postoperative immunosuppression and rejection monitoring have remained unchanged over this period. Three different cardioplegic solutions were employed in graft preservation: St. Thomas Hospital solution in the earliest 31 cases (15%), University of Wisconsin solution in 96 cases (46.4%), and Celsior solution in the last 80 cases (38.6%). All patients who underwent at least one endomyocardial biopsy (176 patients) were divided into two groups according to the findings of IN within the early 3 postoperative months (group A, 49 patients with IN; group B, 127 patients without IN). The following variables were estimated in each group: donor and recipient age, ischemic time, type of cardioplegia, late mortality for cardiac causes, incidence of grade >2 rejection within the first 6 postoperative months, late incidence of grade >2 rejection, late incidence of NYHA class >II. No significant difference was found in any parameter between the two groups, except for the type of cardioplegic solution. A significantly higher incidence of ischemic necrosis in hearts preserved with St. Thomas solution was found (P < 0.001). Although pathology findings show that extracellular solutions carried a higher risk of early IN, no associated significant impairment in terms of late survival and event-free rate was observed in recipients with early IN.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 11471655     DOI: 10.1007/pl00007267

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Heart Vessels        ISSN: 0910-8327            Impact factor:   2.037


  3 in total

1.  A novel method of measuring cardiac preservation injury demonstrates University of Wisconsin solution is associated with less ischemic necrosis than Celsior in early cardiac allograft biopsy specimens.

Authors:  Timothy J George; George J Arnaoutakis; Claude A Beaty; Ashish S Shah; John V Conte; Marc K Halushka
Journal:  J Heart Lung Transplant       Date:  2011-12-30       Impact factor: 10.247

2.  Myocardial apoptosis and injury of donor hearts kept in completely beating status with normothermic blood perfusion for transplants.

Authors:  Jun Kuang; Yanpeng Sun; Wei Wang; Han Ke; Hong Ye
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Med       Date:  2015-04-15

3.  Glycated ACE2 receptor in diabetes: open door for SARS-COV-2 entry in cardiomyocyte.

Authors:  Nunzia D'Onofrio; Lucia Scisciola; Celestino Sardu; Maria Consiglia Trotta; Marisa De Feo; Ciro Maiello; Pasquale Mascolo; Francesco De Micco; Fabrizio Turriziani; Emilia Municinò; Pasquale Monetti; Antonio Lombardi; Maria Gaetana Napolitano; Federica Zito Marino; Andrea Ronchi; Vincenzo Grimaldi; Anca Hermenean; Maria Rosaria Rizzo; Michelangela Barbieri; Renato Franco; Carlo Pietro Campobasso; Claudio Napoli; Maurizio Municinò; Giuseppe Paolisso; Maria Luisa Balestrieri; Raffaele Marfella
Journal:  Cardiovasc Diabetol       Date:  2021-05-07       Impact factor: 9.951

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.