Mild hypothermia attenuates ischaemia/reperfusion injury: insights from serial non-invasive pressure–volume loops

Author:

Berg Jonathan123ORCID,Jablonowski Robert2ORCID,Nordlund David2ORCID,Ryd Daniel2ORCID,Heiberg Einar2ORCID,Carlsson Marcus2ORCID,Arheden Håkan2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Physiology, Department of Clinical Sciences LundFaculty of Medicine, Lund University , Box 117 221 00 Lund , Sweden

2. Skåne University Hospital , Carl-Bertil Laurells gata 9, 214 28 Malmö , Sweden

3. Syntach AB , Lund , Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Aims Mild hypothermia, 32–35°C, reduces infarct size in experimental studies, potentially mediating reperfusion injuries, but human trials have been ambiguous. To elucidate the cardioprotective mechanisms of mild hypothermia, we analysed cardiac performance in a porcine model of ischaemia/reperfusion, with serial cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging throughout 1 week using non-invasive pressure–volume (PV) loops. Methods and results Normothermia and Hypothermia group sessions (n = 7 + 7 pigs, non-random allocation) were imaged with Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) at baseline and subjected to 40 min of normothermic ischaemia by catheter intervention. Thereafter, the Hypothermia group was rapidly cooled (mean 34.5°C) for 5 min before reperfusion. Additional CMR sessions at 2 h, 24 h, and 7 days acquired ventricular volumes and ischaemic injuries (unblinded analysis). Stroke volume (SV: −24%; P = 0.029; Friedmans test) and ejection fraction (EF: −20%; P = 0.068) were notably reduced at 24 h in the Normothermia group compared with baseline. In contrast, the decreases were ameliorated in the Hypothermia group (SV: −6%; P = 0.77; EF: −6%; P = 0.13). Mean arterial pressure remained stable in Normothermic animals (−3%, P = 0.77) but dropped 2 h post-reperfusion in hypothermic animals (−18%, P = 0.007). Both groups experienced a decrease and partial recovery pattern for PV loop-derived variables over 1 week, but the adverse effects tended to attenuate in the Hypothermia group. Infarct sizes were 10 ± 8% in Hypothermic and 15 ± 8% in Normothermic animals (P = 0.32). Analysis of covariance at 24 h indicated that hypothermia has cardioprotective properties incremental to reducing infarct size, such as higher external power (P = 0.061) and lower arterial elastance (P = 0.015). Conclusion Using non-invasive PV loops by CMR, we observed that mild hypothermia at reperfusion alleviates the heart’s work after ischaemia/reperfusion injuries during the first week and preserves short-term cardiac performance. This hypothesis-generating study suggests hypothermia to have cardioprotective properties, incremental to reducing infarct size. The primary cardioprotective mechanism was likely an afterload reduction acutely unloading the left ventricle.

Funder

Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research

Swedish Heart–Lung Foundation

Lund University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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