The purpose of this study was to confirm or disprove the existence of reperfusion-induced extension of necrosis. To avoid the effect of the variability of collateral circulation when groups of dogs are compared, we compared the effect of reperfusion and nonreperfusion on myocardial necrosis in a single ischemic territory, half of which was reperfused and half of which was not. The left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) territory between its last diagonal branch and the apex was studied because it was found to have uniform collateral blood flow. In 20 dogs, the LAD was occluded for 90-240 minutes to produce necrosis of different degrees of transmurality. Before release of this occlusion, the LAD was occluded distally halfway to the apex to keep the distal half nonreperfused. After 5 minutes of proximal reperfusion, Monastral blue dye was injected into the left atrium for demarcation of the reperfused region, and the heart was arrested, excised, cut parallel to the LAD, and placed into triphenyl tetrazolium chloride (T1C) solution for delineation of the region of necrosis. The validity of TTC staining under the conditions of this study was confirmed by light and electron microscopy. The transmurality of necrosis, measured within 1 or 0.5 cm on either side of the boundary, ranged from 30o to 88o of wail thickness and was not different in the reperfused compared with the nonreperfused region (paired t test). Reperfusion did not advance the epicardial edge ofnecrosis compared with the nonreperfused region. In conclusion, at 5 minutes after reperfusion, comparson of necrosis in the reperfused and nonreperfused halves of a single ischemic territory could not demonstrate an extension of necrosis by reperfusion.
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