Abnormal in vivo response to sodium nitroprusside after porcine single lung transplantation

1996 
The chronic increase of pulmonary vascular resistance after lung transplantation is only partly due to an active increase in baseline vasomotor tone, but the nature of the acute pulmonary hypertension after ischemia and reperfusion is not known. We studied the effects of sodium nitroprusside on pulmonary hemodynamics during reperfusion in porcine left lung allotransplants. In twelve pigs (weight : 18 to 24 kg) pulmonary arteries of the native and the transplanted lung were cannulated for right-heart bypass. The total blood flow was 2 L/min. Flow distribution between the lungs was measured at equal mean pulmonary artery pressure, and pulmonary vascular resistance at equal and constant flow-i.e., 1 L/min to each lung. After baseline measurements sodium nitroprusside (1, 3, and 9 μg/kg/min) was administered to six animals (SNP group). The control group (n=6) received an equal amount of the vehicle. After 30 min of discontinuation of the drug infusion, the schedule was repeated. In the transplanted lung, pulmonary vascular resistance decreased in all animals during the first hour of reperfusion. During the second drug infusion pulmonary vascular resistance was significantly lower in the SNP group compared with the control group only at the highest infusion rate of the drug (9 μg/kg/min), which also induced a 44% decrease in systemic vascular resistance. Arterial oxygen tension remained comparable in the two groups throughout the study. Our data suggest that other factors besides active vasoconstriction may contribute to the acute increase of pulmonary vascular resistance after lung transplantation.
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