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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 276: R1516-R1524, 1999;
0363-6119/99 $5.00
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Vol. 276, Issue 5, R1516-R1524, May 1999

Biphasic changes in left ventricular function during hyperdynamic endotoxemia

Satoshi Ishihara, John A. Ward, Osamu Tasaki, Basil A. Pruitt Jr., Martine A. Javors, Richard A. Cassidy, and David W. Mozingo

United States Army Institute of Surgical Research, Fort Sam Houston, Texas 78234

Cardiac contractility was studied in a clinically relevant conscious swine model simulating human hemodynamics during endotoxemia. The slope of the end-systolic pressure-volume relationship [end-systolic elastance (EES)] was used as a load-independent contractility index. Chronic instrumentation in 10 pigs included two pairs of endocardial ultrasonic crystals for measuring internal major and minor axial dimensions of the left ventricle, a micromanometer for left ventricular pressure measurement, and a thermodilution pulmonary artery catheter. After a 10-day recovery period, control measurements of cardiac hemodynamic function were obtained. The following week, Escherichia coli endotoxin (10 µg · kg-1 · h-1) was administered intravenously for 24 h. EES increased 1 h after endotoxin infusion and decreased beyond 7 h. The later hemodynamic changes resembled human cardiovascular performance during endotoxemia more closely than the changes during the acute phase. EES decreased in the later phase. A similar biphasic response of EES has been reported during a tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) challenge. Even though plasma TNF was highest at 1 h and declined thereafter in this study, no consistent relationship between TNF and EES was identified, and TNF levels did not correlate directly with the changes in EES.

contractility; tumor necrosis factor-alpha ; endotoxin; hemodynamics; left ventricle


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