Reimer K A, Jennings R B, Cobb F R, Murdock R H, Greenfield J C, Becker L C, Bulkley B H, Hutchins G M, Schwartz R P, Bailey K R
Circ Res. 1985 May;56(5):651-65. doi: 10.1161/01.res.56.5.651.
The Animal Models for Protecting Ischemic Myocardium Study was undertaken for the purpose of developing reproducible animal models that could be used to assess interventions designed to limit infarct size. This paper describes the results obtained in an unconscious dog model and in a conscious dog model, developed in three participating laboratories. The unconscious dog model, involving reperfusion after 3 hours of ischemia in open-chest dogs, was intended to determine whether therapy followed by early reperfusion would limit infarct size more than reperfusion alone. The conscious dog model used chronically instrumented dogs and permanent coronary occlusion to better mimic myocardial infarction in man. In both models, the proximal circumflex artery was occluded, and the primary experimental endpoint was infarct size, as measured by histological techniques 3 days after the initial occlusion. Infarct size was analyzed in relation to baseline variables including the anatomic area at risk, collateral blood flow to the subepicardial zone of ischemia and hemodynamic determinants of myocardial metabolic demand. Most of the variation in infarct size in control dogs could be related to variation in the area at risk, collateral blood flow, and rate pressure product. Using multivariate analysis and groups of 15 dogs, an intervention that limited infarct size by 10-13% of the area at risk would have been detected 50% of the time. Larger treatment effects would be detected more readily, and smaller effects often would be missed, unless group sizes were larger. Two drugs, verapamil and ibuprofen, were evaluated in both models, with experimental group sizes averaging 13 and 20 dogs, in the unconscious and conscious models, respectively. Three of 15 verapamil-treated dogs in the unconscious model study had much smaller infarcts than expected from baseline parameters. With these exceptions, neither drug limited infarct size in either model.
开展“保护缺血心肌动物模型研究”的目的是开发可重复的动物模型,用于评估旨在限制梗死面积的干预措施。本文描述了在三个参与实验室开发的无意识犬模型和有意识犬模型中获得的结果。无意识犬模型是在开胸犬缺血3小时后进行再灌注,旨在确定早期再灌注后进行治疗是否比单纯再灌注更能限制梗死面积。有意识犬模型使用长期植入仪器的犬和永久性冠状动脉闭塞来更好地模拟人类心肌梗死。在两个模型中,均闭塞左旋支近端,主要实验终点是梗死面积,在初次闭塞后3天通过组织学技术测量。分析梗死面积与基线变量的关系,包括危险解剖区域、缺血心外膜下区域的侧支血流以及心肌代谢需求的血流动力学决定因素。对照犬梗死面积的大部分变化可能与危险区域、侧支血流和心率血压乘积的变化有关。使用多变量分析和每组15只犬的样本量,一种将梗死面积限制在危险区域的10%-13%的干预措施在50%的情况下能够被检测到。除非样本量更大,否则更大的治疗效果更容易被检测到,而较小的效果往往会被遗漏。在两个模型中评估了两种药物,维拉帕米和布洛芬,在无意识模型和有意识模型中,实验组平均样本量分别为13只和20只犬。在无意识模型研究中,15只接受维拉帕米治疗的犬中有3只梗死面积比根据基线参数预期的要小得多。除了这些例外情况,两种药物在任何一个模型中均未限制梗死面积。