| Literature DB >> 17170366 |
Andreas Skyschally1, Petra Gres, Simone Hoffmann, Michael Haude, Raimund Erbel, Rainer Schulz, Gerd Heusch.
Abstract
In patients with unstable angina, plaque rupture and coronary microembolization (ME) can precede complete coronary artery occlusion and impending infarction. ME-induced microinfarcts initiate an inflammatory reaction with increased tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) expression, resulting in progressive contractile dysfunction. However, TNF-alpha is not only a negative inotrope but can also protect the myocardium against infarction. In anesthetized pigs, we studied whether ME protects against infarction when TNF-alpha expression is increased. ME (group1; n=7) was induced by intracoronary infusion of microspheres (42 microm; 3000 per mL/min inflow). Controls (group 2; n=8) received saline. Groups 3 and 4 (n=4 each) were pretreated with ovine TNF-alpha antibodies (25 mg/kg body weight) 30 minutes before ME or placebo, respectively. Ischemia (90 minutes) was induced 6 hours after ME when TNF-alpha was increased (66+/-21 pg/g wet weight; mean+/-SEM) or after placebo (TNF-alpha, 21+/-10 pg/g; P<0.05). Infarct size (percentage area at risk) was determined after 2 hours of reperfusion (triphenyl tetrazolium chloride staining). ME decreased systolic wall thickening progressively over 6 hours (group 1 versus group 2, 65+/-4% versus 90+/-1%; percentage of baseline; P<0.05). TNF-alpha antibodies attenuated the progressive decrease in systolic wall thickening following ME (group 3, 77+/-5% of baseline; P<0.05 versus group 1) with no effect in controls (group 4; 90+/-8% of baseline). With ME, infarct size was decreased to 18+/-4% versus 33+/-4% in group 2 (P<0.05). The infarct size reduction was abolished by TNF-alpha antibodies (group 3 versus group 4, 29+/-3% versus 35+/-5%). In ME, TNF-alpha is responsible for both progressive contractile dysfunction and delayed protection against infarction.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17170366 DOI: 10.1161/01.RES.0000255031.15793.86
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Circ Res ISSN: 0009-7330 Impact factor: 17.367