4 research outputs found
Evaluating the educational environment of an international animal model-based wet lab course for undergraduate students
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: Evaluating the educational environment of an international animal model-based wet lab course for undergraduate students journaltitle: Annals of Medicine and Surgery articlelink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2016.10.004 content_type: article copyright: © 2016 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of IJS Publishing Group Ltd
Myocardial ischemia in intestinal postischemic shock: The effect of hypoxemic reperfusion
Objective: The circulatory shock following intestinal
ischemia-reperfusion injury has been attributed to hypovolemia. The
purpose of the current study is to clarify the pathophysiology of this
type of shock and to test the hypothesis that hypoxemic compared with
normoxemic reperfusion improves hemodynamics.
Design. Randomized animal study.
Setting. Medical school laboratory.
Subjects. Twenty-one pigs.
Interventions: Pigs were subjected to 120 mins of intestinal ischemia by
clamping the superior mesenteric artery. Upon declamping, the animals
were randomized into two groups: a group that received hypoxemic
reperfusion (HR group, n = 8) with a Pao(2) = 30-35 and a control group
reperfused with Pao(2) = 100 mm Hg (control group, n = 13).
Measurements and Main Results. Measurements included mean arterial
pressure, cardiac index, pulmonary artery occlusion pressure, and
requirements for fluids and epinephrine. Biopsies from the terminal
ileal mucosa were taken for malondialdehyde measurements at baseline, at
120 mins of ischemia, and at 30 and 60 mins of reperfusion. A piece of
left ventricle was obtained after 120 mins of reperfusion for histologic
studies. Five of 13 animals of the control group died in intractable
shock; no animal of the HR group died (p = .11). The decrease in the
mean arterial pressure during reperfusion was more pronounced in the
control group (P <.008) despite the larger doses of epinephrine
administered, compared with the HR group (p <.02). During reperfusion,
both groups exhibited a decrease in cardiac index; this was more
pronounced in the control group (p =.0007). Pulmonary artery occlusion
pressure increased during reperfusion in both groups and was more
pronounced in the control group (p =.04 at 60 mins). Although mixed
venous blood oxygen saturation of the control animals was higher at 30
mins of reperfusion (p =.005), it declined after 60 mins and became
lower than that of HR animals at the end of reperfusion (p <.02). The
myocardial histopathologic injury score was higher in the control group
(2.0 +/- 0.69 and 3.4 +/- 0.89 for the HR and control groups,
respectively; p <.03). The concentrations of intestinal mucosa
malondialdehyde were significantly higher in the control group at 60
mins of reperfusion (p <.03).
Conclusions., Acute myocardial ischemia and left heart failure
significantly contribute to the circulatory shock that follows
intestinal ischemia/reperfusion injury and are attenuated by hypoxemic
reperfusion