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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 54, 104-110, Copyright © 1992 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
CM Hsieh, GJ Mishkel, PF Cardoso, H Rakowski, SC Dunn, J Butany, RD Weisel, GA Patterson and JD Cooper
Combined heart-lung transplantation has been used for end-stage primary
pulmonary hypertension. Experience with single-lung transplantation for
other conditions suggested that associated severe right ventricular
dysfunction resulting from increased afterload would recover after
placement of a satisfactory lung allograft. Early experience with the
application of single-lung transplantation for pulmonary hypertension
supports this contention. We devised a reversible canine model of chronic
progressive pressure-overloaded right heart failure by pulmonary artery
banding to study the echocardiographic, hemodynamic, and pathological
reversibility of the failing right heart. Clinical right heart failure was
defined as the development of ascites and pleural effusions. Right heart
failure developed in 23 dogs 67 to 348 days after banding, and they were
divided into two groups to determine its early and long-term effects. Group
1 dogs (n = 11) were either sacrificed immediately after the onset of right
heart failure (n = 5) or unbanded (n = 6); group 2 dogs (n = 12) were
maintained in right heart failure for 3 months and then either sacrificed
(n = 6) or unbanded. Unbanded dogs in both groups were observed for 4
additional months before sacrifice. A control group of 6 normal dogs was
sacrificed for pathological comparisons. After unbanding, the right
ventricular systolic pressure fell from 97 +/- 17 mm Hg (group 1) and 88
+/- 31 mm Hg (group 2) to 44 +/- 11 mm Hg and 47 +/- 13 mm Hg,
respectively. Despite this persistent gradient across the pulmonary artery,
echocardiographic and hemodynamic measures of right ventricular function
returned to normal, albeit more slowly in the group 2 dogs.(ABSTRACT
TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Production and reversibility of right ventricular hypertrophy and right heart failure in dogs
Division of Thoracic Surgery, Toronto General Hospital, Ontario, Canada.
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