“…This phenomenon was first described in 1986, when Murry et al discovered that brief cycles of ischemia and reperfusion within the canine heart exert a myocardial protective effect from a longer ischemic insult [4]. This has been subsequently investigated in other large animal models and within various tissue types, including cardiac [5,6], hepatic [7], renal [8], skeletal muscle [9], musculocutaneous flaps [10,11], and skin flap models [12], although the main investigational focus has historically been on cardiac tissue.…”