Pharmacological Cardioprotection against Ischemia Reperfusion Injury—The Search for a Clinical Effective Therapy

Author:

Wang Qian1,Zuurbier Coert J.1ORCID,Huhn Ragnar2,Torregroza Carolin2,Hollmann Markus W.1ORCID,Preckel Benedikt1ORCID,van den Brom Charissa E.1ORCID,Weber Nina C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anesthesiology—L.E.I.C.A., Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Location AMC, Cardiovascular Science, Meibergdreef 11, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Department of Anesthesiology, Kerckhoff-Clinic-Center for Heart, Lung, Vascular and Rheumatic Disease, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, Benekestr. 2-8, 61231 Bad Nauheim, Germany

Abstract

Pharmacological conditioning aims to protect the heart from myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI). Despite extensive research in this area, today, a significant gap remains between experimental findings and clinical practice. This review provides an update on recent developments in pharmacological conditioning in the experimental setting and summarizes the clinical evidence of these cardioprotective strategies in the perioperative setting. We start describing the crucial cellular processes during ischemia and reperfusion that drive acute IRI through changes in critical compounds (∆GATP, Na+, Ca2+, pH, glycogen, succinate, glucose-6-phosphate, mitoHKII, acylcarnitines, BH4, and NAD+). These compounds all precipitate common end-effector mechanisms of IRI, such as reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, Ca2+ overload, and mitochondrial permeability transition pore opening (mPTP). We further discuss novel promising interventions targeting these processes, with emphasis on cardiomyocytes and the endothelium. The limited translatability from basic research to clinical practice is likely due to the lack of comorbidities, comedications, and peri-operative treatments in preclinical animal models, employing only monotherapy/monointervention, and the use of no-flow (always in preclinical models) versus low-flow ischemia (often in humans). Future research should focus on improved matching between preclinical models and clinical reality, and on aligning multitarget therapy with optimized dosing and timing towards the human condition.

Funder

Chinese Scholarship Council

Dutch Research Council

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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