Fischer J H, Jeschkeit S
Institut für Experimentelle Medizin, Universität zu Köln, Germany.
Transplantation. 1995 May 15;59(9):1259-62.
Rat hearts were preserved for 18 hr under totally ischemic storage conditions at 0-1 degree C with the commercially supplied EuroCollins, Bretschneider's HTK, and University of Wisconsin (UW) preservation solutions compared with our new preservation solution, Euro-Flush-glutathione solution, and a "refreshed" UW solution (UWG) with 3 mmol/L reduced glutathione added before use. Recovery of the organs was measured during 30 min of parabiotic reperfusion with whole blood of a host rat of the same inbred LEW strain, following an initial warm reflush for 5 min. Functional measurements were performed using a latex balloon in the left ventricle. The metabolic recovery was determined from the myocardium freeze-clamped at the end of reperfusion. The left ventricular pressure (LVP) amplitude during pacing to a heart rate of 300/min, as well as +dp/dtmax, -dp/dtmax, isotonic stroke volume, coronary flow, ATP, and ECP values, recovered significantly better after storage in Euro-Flush-glutathione solution (LVP: 63% of controls on average) compared with when the commercially available solutions were used (EuroCollins: 20%, HTK: 42% of controls in LVP). Hearts preserved in UW solution ViaSpan did not recover during the reperfusion period, when unfiltered solution was used. Filtered ViaSpan resulted in LVP recoveries of 38% of controls, while addition of reduced glutathione immediately before use (UWG) improved the effectivity of this solution significantly (LVP 63% of controls). Similar improvements were found for all other functional and metabolic parameters. Thus, the effectivity of UW solution ViaSpan depends upon extraction of the typical particles by a filtering procedure. Effectivity can be improved by a refreshment procedure with reduced glutathione immediately before use.