Vasoprotective effect of adaptation to hypoxia in myocardial ischemia and reperfusion injury

  • E. B. Manukhina Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology RAMS, 8 Baltiyskaya str., Moscow, 125315, Russia; University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, USA
  • O. L. Terekhina Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology RAMS, 8 Baltiyskaya str., Moscow, 125315, Russia
  • L. M. Belkina Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology RAMS, 8 Baltiyskaya str., Moscow, 125315, Russia
  • D. V. Abramochkin Lomonosov Moscow State University, 1, Leninskie Gory, 119991, Moscow, Russia
  • O. P. Budanova1 Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology RAMS, 8 Baltiyskaya str., Moscow, 125315, Russia
  • S. Yu. Mashina Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology RAMS, 8 Baltiyskaya str., Moscow, 125315, Russia
  • B. V. Smirin Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology RAMS, 8 Baltiyskaya str., Moscow, 125315, Russia
  • E. B. Yakunina Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology RAMS, 8 Baltiyskaya str., Moscow, 125315, Russia
  • H. F. Downey University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, USA
Keywords: adaptation to hypoxia, myocardial ischemia and reperfusion injury, endothelial dysfunction, coronary blood vessels, aorta

Abstract

Adaptation to hypoxia is known to be cardioprotective in ischemic and reperfusion (IR) injury of the myocardium. This study was focused on investigating a possibility for prevention of endothelial dysfunction in IR injury of the rat heart using adaptation to intermittent hypoxia, which was performed in a cyclic mode (5—10 min of hypoxia interspersed with 4 min of normoxia, 5—8 cycles daily) for 21 days. Endothelial function of coronary blood vessels was evaluated after the in vitro IR of isolated heart (15 min of ischemia and 10 min of reperfusion) by the increment of coronary flow rate in response to acetylcholine. Endothelium-dependent relaxation of isolated rat aorta was evaluated after the IR myocardial injury in situ (30 min of ischemia and 60 min of reperfusion) by a relaxation response of noradrenaline-precontracted vessel rings to acetylcholine. The following major results were obtained in this study: 1) IR myocardial injury induced endothelial dysfunction of coronary blood vessels and the aorta, a non-coronary blood vessel, remote from the IR injury area; and 2) adaptation to hypoxia prevented the endothelial dysfunction of both coronary and non-coronary blood vessels associated with the IR injury. Therefore, adaptation to hypoxia is not only cardioprotective but also vasoprotective in myocardial IR injury.

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Published
2013-11-29
How to Cite
Manukhina E. B., Terekhina O. L., Belkina L. M., Abramochkin D. V., Budanova1 O. P., Mashina S. Y., Smirin B. V., Yakunina E. B., Downey H. F. Vasoprotective effect of adaptation to hypoxia in myocardial ischemia and reperfusion injury // Patologicheskaya Fiziologiya i Eksperimental’naya Terapiya (Pathological physiology and experimental therapy). 2013. VOL. 57. № 4. PP. 26–31.
Section
Original research

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