Calves chronically implanted with a total artificial heart as a pharmacological model.

1991 
Pharmacological therapy for congestive heart failure includes drugs that have both inotropic and vasoactive effects, although it is sometimes difficult to differentiate between the two effects. An animal with an implanted total artificial heart (TAH) allows the investigation of the vascular effect of these drugs in the absence of the effect on the myocardium. An advantage of the TAH model is its sensitivity to changes in right and left ventricular preload and afterload. Four instrumented TAH calves were given vasoactive drugs and the response was compared to control. Epinephrine, dopamine, isoproterenol, and nitroprusside were selected because of the predictability of their responses. Epinephrine caused a significant increase in systemic vascular resistance (SVR), and dopamine caused a significant increase in Pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) and Isoproterenol caused a significant decrease in PVR. TAH implanted calves can thus serve as a pharmacological model to study the vascular response, which may be useful in investigation of new agents with inotropic and vascular effects.
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