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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Zeitschrift für Kardiologie 89 (2000), S. 126-131 
    ISSN: 1435-1285
    Keywords: Key words Coronary blood flow – myocardial ischemia – coronary atherosclerosis – coronary artery disease – microcirculation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The hallmark of ischemic heart disease is the presence of focal obstructions in the major coronary arteries. Classically, epicardial stenoses are thought to exert their pathogenetic role mainly through a limitation on maximal flow capacity in the distal vascular bed. Ischemia is thus thought to occur whenever oxygen consumption exceeds the flow availability. Although a number of experimental studies confirmed these assumptions, the adherence of this experimental model with the clinical observations is still far from being convincing. Evidence now exists that atherosclerosis causes more profound alterations in the regulation of myocardial perfusion, besides the hydraulic effects of epicardial obstructions. These alterations affect endothelial regulation of coronary vasomotor tone both in the large arteries and in the distal microcirculation. In agreement with this experimental evidence, an abnormal response to endothelium-mediated vasodilators has been reported in patients with coronary artery disease. Moreover, several studies also reported an abnormal response of atherosclerotic coronary microcirculation to atrial pacing tachycardia and dipyridamole, which are thought to be largely endothelium independent. An even more striking observation is the finding of an intense microvascular constrictor response in the myocardium, supplied by a severely stenotic coronary artery, to pacing-induced ischemia. This observation strongly suggests that coronary microcirculation might aggravate the flow reduction imposed by the epicardial stenosis, thus playing some role in the pathogenesis of ischemia. This phenomenon might reflect the presence of a primary abnormality of coronary microcirculation in patients with coronary artery disease or the existence of a pressure-oriented regulation of vascular tone which prevent trans-stenotic pressure drop by means of a heterogeneously distributed microcirculatory vasoconstriction.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1435-1803
    Keywords: myocardial mitochondria ; palmitic acid oxidation rate ; pyruvic acid oxidation rate ; Krebs cycle enzymes ; beta-oxidation enzymes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Mitochondria were prepared from the subendocardial and subepicardial layers of the canine left ventricle. The oxidation rates of palmitate, palmitoyl carnitine and pyruvate of the mitochondria obtained from the two cardiac layers were measured. The cytochrome content and the specific activities of different beta oxidation and Krebs cycle enzymes were also measured in the two mitochondrial populations. Mitochondria isolated from the ENDO layer showed significantly higher oxidation rates than mitochondria from the EPI layer for all the three substrates. No statistically significant differences in cytochrome c+c1 and a+a3 content were found in mitochondria isolated from the two regions. No significant transmural differences were found in fatty acyl CoA, L-3-hydroxy fatty acyl CoA, succinic and malic dehydrogenase specific activities, whilst isocitric dehydrogenase (NADP) specific activity was significantly higher in mitochondria isolated from the inner layer. In conclusion, the mitochondria isolated from the inner left ventricular layer of the canine heart show a higher oxidative capacity than subepicardial mitochondria. This difference could partly be explained by the higher specific activity of isocitric dehydrogenase in this layer. These properties of subendocardial mitochondria could represent a metabolic support for the greater contractile performance of this layer.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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