Background: The purpose of this study was to determine whether coronary venous retroperfusion with pressure-controlled intermittent coronary sinus occlusion (PICSO) alone and in combination with coronary venous substrate enhancement using L-glutamate would decrease ischemic damage after surgical revascularization for an acute coronary occlusion.
Methods and results: In 40 pigs, the second and third diagonal vessels were occluded with snares for 90 minutes followed by 30 minutes of cardioplegic arrest and 180 minutes of reperfusion with the coronary snares released. During the period of coronary occlusion, 10 pigs received PICSO using a balloon-tipped triple-lumen catheter in the coronary sinus; 10 pigs received PICSO plus oxygenated blood transfused retrograde via the PICSO catheter (7 ml/min), 10 pigs received PICSO plus an oxygenated blood L-glutamate (13 mM) solution, and 10 pigs received neither PICSO, blood, nor L-glutamate through the coronary sinus (unmodified). Hearts treated with PICSO had higher wall motion scores (1.27 +/- 0.33 for unmodified, 2.40 +/- 0.40* for PICSO, 2.45 +/- 0.20* for PICSO plus blood, 2.85 +/- 0.30* for PICSO plus L-glutamate; *p < 0.05 from unmodified where 4 is normal to -1 is dyskinesia), lower area of necrosis-to-area of risk ratio using histochemical staining techniques (73 +/- 4% for unmodified, 27 +/- 4 for PICSO; 18 +/- 2* for PICSO plus blood, 12 +/- 1* PICSO plus L-glutamate; *p < 0.05 from unmodified), significantly less tissue acidosis (pH) compared with the unmodified group (pH, -0.41 +/- 0.13 for unmodified, -0.16 +/- 0.03* for PICSO, -0.19 +/- 0.02* for PICSO plus blood, -0.20 +/- 0.08* for PICSO plus L-glutamate; *p < 0.05 from unmodified).
Conclusions: Coronary venous retroperfusion with PICSO alone and in combination with coronary venous substrate enhancement using L-glutamate significantly decreases ischemic damage during urgent surgical revascularization.