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AJP - Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, Vol 272, Issue 2 718-R725, Copyright © 1997 by American Physiological Society
ARTICLES |
D. R. Meldrum, J. C. Cleveland Jr, X. Meng, B. C. Sheridan, A. Banerjee and A. H. Harken
Department of Surgery, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver 80262, USA.
Hemorrhage and resuscitation (H-R) has been recognized as an exclusively destructive process that results in multiple organ dysfunction. Although it is well established that endogenous adaptation mechanisms exist, it is unknown whether H-R induces endogenous adaptive/protective mechanisms. Furthermore, alpha1-adrenoceptors and de novo protein synthesis have been variably implicated in myocardial adaptation responses. This study tests the hypothesis that H-R results in myocardial adaptation by a mechanism mediated by alpha1-adrenoceptors and requiring de novo protein synthesis. The aims of the present study were to determine 1) whether H-R stress results in acute cardioadaptation to subsequent global, normothermic ischemia-reperfusion (I-R); 2) whether H-R-induced endogenous adaptation is mediated by alpha1-adrenoceptors; and 3) whether H-R-induced endogenous adaptation requires de novo protein synthesis. Rats were hemorrhaged and resuscitated, sham operated, or neither, with and without prior alpha1-adrenoceptor or protein synthesis inhibition. Hearts were then isolated and subjected to a second insult consisting of global, normothermic I-R (20 min ischemia-40 min reperfusion). The results show that antecedent H-R improved post-I-R left ventricular developed pressure, compliance, coronary flow, and decreased reperfusion creatine kinase loss (P < 0.05, analysis of variance with Bonferroni-Dunn). H-R-induced adaptation was abolished by prior alpha1-adrenoceptor blockade (prazosin, 0.5 mg/kg ip); however, inhibition of de novo protein synthesis (cyclohexamide, 1.0 mg/kg ip) did not affect H-R-induced acute adaptation. This study constitutes the initial demonstration that H-R induces endogenous cardioadaptation, which is mediated by an alpha1-adrenergic signaling pathway, but does not require de novo protein synthesis.
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