Literature DB >> 3568336

The role of calcium in ischemic myocardial injury.

J G Murphy, J D Marsh, T W Smith.   

Abstract

Hypoxia and ischemia produce depression of myocardial contractile function and alterations in calcium homeostasis. Although both functional abnormalities and alterations in calcium handling are reversible under some conditions, reoxygenation or reperfusion can also lead to paradoxical augmentation of injury. Under many conditions of ischemia and reperfusion, however, a causal relation between altered calcium handling and cellular injury has been difficult to establish. Calcium entry through specific calcium channels during and after hypoxic insult can account for only a fraction of the observed pathologic transsarcolemmal calcium flux; sodium-calcium exchange also appears to contribute to calcium influx but to a limited degree. During reoxygenation calcium also appears to enter through nonspecific sarcolemmal permeability changes. The hypothesis that mitochondria are calcium loaded by hypoxia and reoxygenation and that the calcium loading produces mitochondrial dysfunction has not been substantiated convincingly. Brief hypoxia can produce mitochondrial dysfunction without mitochondrial calcium overload, whereas calcium overload per se does not initially produce irreversible cellular injury. Under conditions of prolonged ischemic insult, with or without reperfusion, it is likely that disturbed calcium homeostasis does play a role in ultimate cellular injury. However, available data fall short of establishing intracellular calcium overload as a necessary or sufficient condition to produce irreversible myocardial cell injury.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3568336

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  16 in total

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Authors:  Y Nakamura; N Takemoto; H Kuroda; S Ohgi
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2.  Prostaglandin E1 increased cardiac contractility in cardiac arrest during open-heart surgery.

Authors:  J Hasegawa; H Komatsu; S Matsumoto; K Enzan; H Mitsuhata
Journal:  J Anesth       Date:  1993-07       Impact factor: 2.078

Review 3.  Mechanisms of exercise-induced muscle fibre injury.

Authors:  R B Armstrong; G L Warren; J A Warren
Journal:  Sports Med       Date:  1991-09       Impact factor: 11.136

Review 4.  Calcium-channel blockers and anaesthesia.

Authors:  P G Durand; J J Lehot; P Foëx
Journal:  Can J Anaesth       Date:  1991-01       Impact factor: 5.063

Review 5.  The role of beta-receptor and calcium-entry-blocking agents in acute myocardial infarction in the thrombolytic era: can the results of thrombolytic reperfusion be enhanced?

Authors:  C J Lavie; J G Murphy; B J Gersh
Journal:  Cardiovasc Drugs Ther       Date:  1988-12       Impact factor: 3.727

6.  Regulation of the L-type calcium channel alpha-1 subunit by chronic depolarization in the neuron-like PC12 and aortic smooth muscle A7r5 cell lines.

Authors:  O Feron; T Godfraind
Journal:  Pflugers Arch       Date:  1995-07       Impact factor: 3.657

7.  ATP-sensitive K+ channels in cardiac ischemia: an endogenous mechanism for protection of the heart.

Authors:  W C Cole
Journal:  Cardiovasc Drugs Ther       Date:  1993-08       Impact factor: 3.727

8.  Disruption of sarcolemmal integrity during ischemia and reperfusion of canine hearts as monitored by use of lathanum ions and a specific probe.

Authors:  S Koba; N Konno; H Suzuki; T Katagiri
Journal:  Basic Res Cardiol       Date:  1995 May-Jun       Impact factor: 17.165

9.  Prevention of postischemic reperfusion injury: the improvement of myocardial tissue blood flow after ischemia by terminal nicorandil-Mg cardioplegia.

Authors:  H Orita; M Fukasawa; S Hirooka; T Minowa; H Uchino; M Washio
Journal:  Surg Today       Date:  1993       Impact factor: 2.549

10.  Cardioprotection by kappa-opioid receptor agonist U50488H is mediated by opioidergic regulation but not by calcium current modulation.

Authors:  Kook Jin Chun; Young Ho Jang; June Hong Kim; Jun Kim; Yong Hyun Park
Journal:  Korean J Anesthesiol       Date:  2010-02-28
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