Literature DB >> 7954626

Cardioprotective effects of ranolazine (RS-43285) in the isolated perfused rabbit heart.

M R Gralinski1, S C Black, K S Kilgore, A Y Chou, J G McCormack, B R Lucchesi.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim was to examine the putative cardioprotective effects of the novel antianginal agent, ranolazine, using an isolated rabbit heart model of ischaemia and reperfusion.
METHODS: Hearts from male New Zealand White rabbits were perfused in the Langendorff mode with a recirculating Krebs buffer at a constant flow of 20-25 ml.min-1. After equilibration, hearts were treated with ranolazine (10 or 20 microM) or vehicle control for 10 min before exposure to a 30 min period of global ischaemia and 60 min reperfusion; a normoxic control group was also studied. Haemodynamic variables (left ventricular pressure), myocardial creatine kinase, and potassium release were measured at baseline (preischaemic) and at selected points during reperfusion; tissue calcium and ATP content were also measured and electron microscopy was performed.
RESULTS: Left ventricular developed pressure during reperfusion was improved (p < 0.05) in a concentration dependent manner by 10 and 20 microM ranolazine (the baseline value was unaffected) with the latter dose resulting in a return to preischaemic values. The release of creatine kinase and potassium was reduced in the ranolazine groups (p < 0.05). A 2.5-fold increase in tissue calcium content in vehicle treated hearts at the end of reperfusion (compared to normoxic time control) was reduced by 10 microM ranolazine (p < 0.05) and completely prevented by 20 microM ranolazine. Similarly, the decrease in tissue ATP was largely inhibited by ranolazine in a concentration dependent manner. Electron microscopy showed that 20 microM ranolazine prevented the occurrence of many indications of reperfusion injury observed in vehicle treated control hearts, for example, blurring of myofibrillar Z bands, derangement of myofibrillar architecture, disruption of mitochondrial cristae and matrices, and the appearance of electron-dense bodies within them. The deposition of lanthanum chloride, a marker of blood vessel integrity, is also modified in the ranolazine treated hearts.
CONCLUSIONS: Ranolazine has impressive cardioprotective properties in an isolated rabbit heart model of ischaemia and reperfusion, suggesting that the drug warrants further research into its precise mechanism of action.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7954626     DOI: 10.1093/cvr/28.8.1231

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cardiovasc Res        ISSN: 0008-6363            Impact factor:   10.787


  22 in total

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