Human albumin enriched St. Thomas Hospital cardioplegic solution increases reperfusion injury in isolated perfused rat hearts.

1998 
Abstract In open heart surgery it is very important to protect the heart during the ischaemic period in terms of mortality and morbidity. Many different cardioplegic solutions are in clinical use without being tested experimentally. In this study we intended to investigate the effects of albumin addition to St. Thomas Hospital cardioplegic solution on cardiac protection to ischaemia. Rat hearts were isolated and perfused in Langendorff apparatus ( n =6 for each group). After the stabilisation period, the hearts in the control group were arrested with St. Thomas Hospital cardioplegic solution for 3 min then subjected to 30 min of global ischaemia in cardioplegic solution, this is followed by reperfusion for 10 min. In albumin groups, the experimental protocol was the same but 2.25%, 4.5% or 9% human albumin was added to the cardioplegic solution. All of the hearts were compared for their pre-ischaemic and post-ischaemic contractility, heart rate, coronary flow, LDH and CK enzyme leakage, and wet/dry weight ratio values. The contraction, heart rate ( P P
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