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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 56, 1279-1283, Copyright © 1993 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
PC Corcoran, SS Tse, NM Katz, Y Wang, JD St Louis, ML Foegh, AR Analouei and RB Wallace
Oxygen-derived free radicals have been identified as the mediators of
tissue injury during reperfusion in organ transplantation. Lipid
peroxidation of cell membrane polyunsaturated fatty acids, generating
conjugated dienes (CD), is a toxicity of oxygen-derived free radicals. The
CD structure in fatty acyl moieties was measured by high-pressure liquid
chromatography in samples of inferior pulmonary venous blood and pulmonary
tissue to assess reperfusion injury and oxygen-derived free
radical-mediated damage in a canine model of left lung allotransplantation.
The cold ischemic preservation interval was 6 hours and the
posttransplantation monitoring period was 6 hours. Twenty- eight size- and
weight-matched adult male dogs underwent left lung allotransplantation and
were randomized to receive pulmonary artery flush of modified Euro-Collins
(EC) (40 mL/kg) or University of Wisconsin (UW) (40 mL/kg) solutions alone
or with the addition of the platelet-activating factor antagonist BN 52021
(10 mg/kg). When employed, BN 52021 was administered to donors 30 minutes
before harvest and recipients 30 minutes before reperfusion. Left and right
inferior pulmonary venous blood samples were obtained at baseline before
transplantation and at 1, 2, 4, and 6 hours after transplantation; tissue
samples were obtained after euthanasia. Serum and tissue CD levels are
expressed as mean fraction of the total hydroperoxide sample +/- standard
error of the mean. At 6 hours after transplantation, the EC group's (n = 7)
CD fraction was 0.28 +/- 0.03, whereas that of the EC + BN 52021 group (n =
7) was 0.12 +/- 0.03 (p < 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Reduction of conjugated dienes in lung transplantation: effect of BN 52021
Department of Surgery, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC 20007.
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