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Hypothermic, Oxygenated Perfusion (HOPE) Provides Cardioprotection Via Succinate Oxidation Prior to Normothermic Perfusion in a Rat Model of Donation after Circulatory Death (DCD)

Authors :
Adrian Segiser
Thierry Carrel
Sarah L. Longnus
Philipp Dutkowski
Rahel K. Wyss
Natalia Méndez Carmona
Matteo Mueller
Maria Arnold
University of Zurich
Longnus, Sarah L
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

In donation after circulatory death (DCD), cardiac grafts are subjected to warm ischemia in situ, prior to a brief period of cold, static storage (CSS) at procurement, and ex situ, normothermic, machine perfusion (NMP) for transport and graft evaluation. Cold ischemia and normothermic reoxygenation during NMP could aggravate graft injury through continued accumulation and oxidation, respectively, of mitochondrial succinate, and the resultant oxidative stress. We hypothesized that replacing CSS with hypothermic, oxygenated perfusion (HOPE) could provide cardioprotection by reducing cardiac succinate levels before NMP. DCD was simulated in male Wistar rats. Following 21 minutes in situ ischemia, explanted hearts underwent 30 minutes hypothermic storage with 1 of the following: (1) CSS, (2) HOPE, (3) hypothermic deoxygenated perfusion (HNPE), or (4) HOPE + AA5 (succinate dehydrogenase inhibitor) followed by normothermic reperfusion to measure cardiac and metabolic recovery. After hypothermic storage, tissue ATP/ADP levels were higher and succinate concentration was lower in HOPE vs CSS, HNPE, and HOPE + AA5 hearts. After 60 minutes reperfusion, cardiac function was increased and cellular injury was decreased in HOPE compared with CSS, HNPE, and HOPE + AA5 hearts. HOPE provides improved cardioprotection via succinate oxidation prior to normothermic reperfusion compared with CSS, and therefore is a promising strategy for preservation of cardiac grafts obtained with DCD.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9c50ed0c24e403e29166086ad185d838
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-196371