Myocardial hypertrophy decreases the muscle mass-to-vascularization ratio,
thereby changing myocardial perfusion. The effect of these changes on
myocardial oxygenation in hypertrophic Langendorff-perfused rat hearts was
measured using epimyocardial NADH videofluorimetry, whereby ischemic
myocardium displays a high fluorescence intensity. Hypertrophic hearts, in
contrast to control hearts, developed ischemic areas during
oxygen-saturated Langendorff perfusion. Reoxygenation of control hearts
after a hypoxic episode resulted in a swift decrease of fluorescence in a
heterogeneous pattern of small, evenly dispersed, highly fluorescent
patches. Identical patterns could be evoked by occluding capillaries with
microspheres 5.9 micrometer in diameter. Ten seconds after reoxygenation
there were no more dysoxic areas, whereas reoxygenation in hypertrophic
hearts showed larger ischemic areas that took significantly longer to
return to normoxic fluorescence intensities. Hypothesizing that the larger
areas originate at a vascular level proximal to the capillary network, we
induced hypoxic patterns by embolizing control hearts with microspheres
9.8 and 15 micrometer in diameter. The frequency distribution histograms
of these dysoxic surface areas matched those of hypertrophic hearts and
differed significantly from those of hearts embolized with 5.9-micrometer
microspheres. These results suggest the existence of areas in hypertrophic
Langendorff-perfused hearts with suboptimal vascularization originating at
the arteriolar and/or arterial level