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Title: Ischemic heart disease


1
Ischemic heart disease
  • Jana Plevkova MD, PhD
  • Associate professor
  • Department of Patophysiology
  • JLF UK

2
Ischemic heart disease
  • Acute or chronic disorder of myocardial functions
    developed on the basis
  • of reduced coronary blood flow due to damage of
    the coronary vessels
  • mostly due to coronary atherosclerosis
  • So this mean that inbalance between oxygen needs
    and oxygen supply that was discussed earlier is
    caused by pathological process in the coronary
    arteries.

3
Clinical stand point classification
  • Chronic forms
  • Stabile angina pectoris
  • Inversive (Prinzmetal) angina pectoris
  • IHD with arrhythmias
  • Status post MI
  • Clinically asymptomatic silent ischemia
  • Acute forms
  • Non-stabile angina pectoris
  • Myocardial infarction
  • Sudden cardiac death
  • Intermediary coronary syndrome

4
  • The heart works permanently and this work
    requires a lot of energy
  • The heart is aerobic organ this means that
    energy is provided by metabolizing of substrates
    and the oxygen is necessary for this process
  • For optimal functions of the heart there should
    be a precise balance between oxygen supply and
    the oxygen requirement in the heart cells

5
Blood flow through the coronary arteries oxygen
supply
Oxygen requirement
Perfusion pressure
Vessel resistance
Tension in the ventricular wall
Power of contraction
Heart rate
Ventricular volume
Intraventricular pressure
6
Coronary circulation
  • Provides oxygen and substrate supply
  • - Epicardial arteries
  • Intramyocardial branches
  • Capillaries
  • Blood flow through the coronary arteries is
    determined by
  • perfusion pressure
  • extra vascular compression of the myocardium
  • heart rate (diastolic period)
  • coronary auto regulation
  • endothelial functions
  • neurohumoral regulation
  • functional condition of the heart and it's
    metabolic requirements

7
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8
Regulation of coronary circulation
  • auto regulation, metabolic, hormonal, neural
    regulation
  • Coronary perfusion is relatively constant in the
    ranges of the pressure in aorta between 40 160
    mmHg auto regulation
  • The main regulating factor is metabolic rate of
    the myocardial cells
  • of the metabolic rate leads to coronary
    vasodilatation, via factors like adenosine, CO2,
    H, K, NO released from endothelial cells due to
    accumulation of metabolic products and sudden
    vasodilatation
  • neural regulation is less important

9
  • Extravascular pressure compression of the
    vessels by the myocardium during systolic phase
    could result into complete block of the blood
    flow in the left ventricle and significant
    reduction of the blood flow in the right
    ventricle
  • Intramyocardial branches are perffused only
    during diastolic phase
  • Increasing of the heart rate facilitates
    metabolic requirements of the heart cells, but on
    the other hand leads to reduction of the
    diastolic phase therefore limits the coronary
    blood flow

10
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11
diastolic phase
Systolic phase
12
Myocardial ischemia
  • Myocardial ischemia is a pathological process
    developed in condition of reduced coronary blood
    flow, which does not satisfy energetic
    requirements of the myocardial cells. Disturbed
    balance leads to activation of biochemical
    processes disturbing ionic homeostasis of the
    heart. Hearse, 1994).

13
Pathogenesis of the coronary artery damage
  • There is mostly atherosclerotic damage of the
    vessel wall, but coronary arteries could be
    affected also by other types of pathological
    processes inflammatory response, autoimmune
    damage, metabolic changes mediocalcinosis,
    trauma
  • Pathogenesis of atherosclerosis response
    to injury
  • new aspect ATS is complex
  • inflammatory response

http//www.kellykite.com/205/heart-disease.html
14
  • Endothelium is not only a physical barrier
    between the blood stream and the vessel wall
  • high metabolic activity, contribution to vessel
    reactivity, regulation of thrombogenesis,
    influence on the circulating cells properties
  • endothelial surface is about 500 - 1000 m2 thus
    providing contact between the circulating cells
    and the vessel wall endothelium is the largest
    endcrine organ /1500g/
  • metabolic and secretoric systems influence mainly
    vessel tone and therefore blood flow and blood
    pressure
  • endothelial cells naturally prefer tendency to
    vasodilatation

15
Endothelial vasodilatators
  • production of NO from L arginine by NO
    synthasis, created molecule diffuses into the
    smooth muscles below the endothelium and
    activates guanylatcyclase thereby increasing
    production of cGMP - this leads to relaxation
    of smooth muscle cells resulting into
    vasodilatation
  • production of NO is responsible for permanently
    maintained vasodilatation in the arterial system
  • production of NO is stimulated by shear stress,
    molecules released from thrombocytes (ATP, ADP,
    serotonine), sudden distension of the vessel
    lumen dilatation depending on the blood flow
  • NO is dominant vasodilating substance in basal
    condition, but endothelium could also release
    other molecules PGI2 (prostacycline) PGE2, PGD2
    able to enlarge vessel lumen

16
Endothelial vasconstrictors
  • Endothelines, thromboxan A2, nonstabile
    endoperoxides and molecules of RAA system
  • Endothelines (1, 2, 3) group of peptides with
    21 AMA, originates from molecule of
    proendotheline, which is fragmented by enzymes
    and converted into active molecules
  • ETA a ETB receptors vasoconstrictive response,
    long lasting increased concentration of the
    endothelines provides also proliferating effect
    on the smooth muscles in the media

17
  • ETB receptors after binding of endothelin1
    molecule ? production of NO a prostacycline
    backward regulation - decrease of
    vasoconstrictive effect of endothelines
  • Production of endothelines is stimulated by
    hypoxia, thrombin, cytokines, ATII, epinephrine
  • Local system of RAA endothelial cells in the
    whole body are able to produce molecules of RAA
    system, but its role is not entirely understood
  • Adhesion of the cells
  • Intact endothelium does not allow adhesion of
    circulating cells, but allows rolling of some
    cells on the endothelial surface
  • CAM expression of cell adhesion molecules on
    the endothelial surface and on the surface of
    circulating cells regulates their rolling, then
    adhesion onto surface and transmigration through
    the intima, this process is facilitated during
    inflammation of endothelial dysfunction

18
Pathophysiologic classificatin of vascular injury
leading to atherosclerosis
Type I injury functional alteration of
endothelial cells
without morphologic changes
Type II injury endothelial denudation and
intimal damage with intact internal elastic
lamina
Type III injury endothelial denudation with the
damage of both intima
and media
19
Smooth muscle proliferation
Accumulation of lipids and monocytes adhesion
Thrombosis
Type I injury mierna
not present present
Type II injury ?
minimal fibromuscular layer
on
the plaque surface



Type III injury ?
moderate strong organization
of the
thrombus
I. degree
Endotel
II. degree
Intima
III. degree
Media
Adventitia
20
A new insight into atherosclerosis
  • Chronic inflammatory process with participation
    of lipoproteins, macrophages, T lymphocytes,
    endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells. The
    consequence of this complex process is formation
    of lesions inside the vessel wall
    atherosclerotic plaques
  • The plaques consist of the core - containing
    pulpy cellular debris and fibromuscular cap
  • Although ATS is generalized problem in all
    arteries of the human body, clinical
    manifestation of the ATS is usually restricted to
    cerebral and coronary circulation and to
    circulation of the lower extremities

21
The basic point of ATS process is damage of the
endothelium
  • Endothelium could by damaged by
  • sudden changes of the blood flow direction (in
    the sites of the vessel branching)
  • oxidative stress (overproduction of oxygen
    reactive species)
  • ? concentration of pro inflammatory cytokines
  • some infectious agents and their products
  • ? level of homocysteine (is toxic for the
    endothelium)
  • Increased blood pressure
  • Long lasting hyperglycaemia diabetes mellitus

22
Endothelial injury could result into endothelial
dysfunction and its consequences
  • ? endothelial permeability for blood plasma
    proteins and lipoproteins
  • Adhesion of monocytes and their transformation
    into macrophages
  • Shifting of the balance in the vessel tone
    regulation into proconstrictive preparedness
  • Particles of the LDL cholesterol are now able to
    enter the vessel wall
  • LOX 1 receptors high afinity receptors for
    oxidative forms of the lipoproteins which are
    responsible for disposing of the lipids
    penetrated into the vessel wall

23
  • Lipids penetrating the vessel wall (lipids
    lesions) are phagocyted by macrophages (via LOX1
    receptors) ? they are after lipid ingestion
    converted into the foam cells
  • Endothelial cells, thrombocytes and activated
    macrophages produce growth factors responsible
    for proliferation and migration of smooth muscle
    cells towards the lumen of the vessel.
  • This process is responsible for creation of
    fibromuscular layer on the surface of the plaque.
    This cap is like an envelope of the plaque, above
    the accumulated lipids.
  • Stable fibromuscular plaques strong
    fibromuscular cap, less lipids ? plaque is
    growing progressively disturbing the hemodynamic
    properties of the vessel, complications are not
    frequent
  • Nonstable lipid plaques - thin fibromuscular
    cap, plenty of lipids, they are predisposed to
    complications

24
Progression of ATS process
  • Early lesions in the wall risk factors of ATS
    ? growing of the ATS plaques
  • genetic participation
  • level of LDL a VLDL
  • level of HDL
  • lipoprotein a
  • hypertension
  • diabetes mellitus
  • men gender
  • level of homocysteine
  • level of coagulation factors
  • obesity
  • family history

environmental factors smoking lack of physical
exercise faty diet stress
25
Intravascular ultrasound in case of ATS plaques
26
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27
growing of the plaques ? clinical manifestation
  • slow progression in the growing process of the
    plaque chronic forms of IHD
  • Growing of the plaque is caused by increase of
    the lipid content inside the core and by the
    fibromuscular proliferation
  • The surface of the plaque is usually covered by
    endothelium with impaired functions, which allows
    creation of small
  • thrombi on the endothelial surface
  • These small thrombi are then organized by
    conversion into the fibroid structure.
  • Accumulation of such kind of material on the
    plaque surface leads to its enlargement
  • Creation of small thrombi is usually asymptomatic

28
Progression in the plaque growing
http//www.nature.com/nm/journal/v17/n11/full/nm.2
538.html
29
  • Sudden enlargement of the plaque acute coronary
    syndromes mainly due to complications of
    nonstable plaques
  • Disruption of the plaque surface ? uncovering of
    underlying collagen ? collagen stimulates
    creation of the thrombus
  • Fragmentation of the thrombus with subsequent
    embolization of smaller particles forward into
    the periphery of coronary circulation
  • Fissuring or disruption of the plaque with
    subsequent disjunction of some part of the plaque
    toward the bloodstream
  • Disruption with bleeding inside the plaque
  • Coronary spasm in the arteries with endothelial
    dysfunction

30
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tm
31
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32
  • Small parietal thrombi, as well as, healing of
    the fissuring of the plaque surface this means
    fibroproduction, could contribute to development
    of more serious ATS changes.
  • Thrombogenesis and organization of the thrombi
    are simultaneous processes
  • Fibrotization of the parietal thrombus is
    regulated by molecules released mainly from
    thrombocytes -
  • PGF, TGF? - these molecules are
  • growth factors supporting
  • fibroproduction

http//www.nature.com/nri/journal/v6/n7/fig_tab/nr
i1882_F1.html3
33
Mechanisms leading to ischemia
  • stabile fibromuscular plaques in the CA usually
    large plaques, poor of lipids, without tendency
    to complications
  • presence of the plaque inside the lumen influence
    the blood flow resulting into stenosis of the
    lumen
  • size of the stenosis limits the blood supply in
    the distal parts of the coronary circulation
  • limitation of more than 75 of the lumen could
    be considered as a serious stenosis
  • Consecutive limitation of the blood flow provide
    condition for collateral circulation

34
Stable fibromuscular plaques
  • Their presence inside the lumen could limit the
    blood flow thus limit oxygen supply addressed for
    working myocardial cells
  • Long lasting tight stenosis (possibility for
    opening of collateral circulation) used to result
    into small infarction due to collateral blood
    supply
  • Stable plaque stable angina pectoris
  • Chest pain occurs usually after the same
    (stabile, constant) dose of physical exercise or
    emotional event, but important is that this pain
    lasts less than 15 min and disappears after
    stopping of the physical activity or due to
    nitrate therapy

35
Nonstable plaque
http//www.nature.com/nm/journal/v17/n11/full/nm.2
538.html
36
Nonstable angina pectoris
  • Chest pain occurs after different doses of
    physical exercise or emotional event (once
    intensive, another day mild activity could
    provoke the pain). This pain lasts more than 15
    min and does not respond to rest condition or
    nitrate therapy
  • Progress of the stenosis in time without
    appropriate intervention leads to myocardial
    infarction
  • Myocardial infarction is necrosis of myocardial
    cells due to ischemia clinical symptoms are the
    same like in nonstable angina, but to make a
    diagnose of MI we should confirm presence of
    necrosis by ECG and enzyme analysis CK MB,
    AST, Troponine T

37
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38
Mechanisms responsible for nonstable AP and MI
  • The main role in this process plays creation of
    the thrombus on the basis of ATS damage in
    coronary arteries, usually on the basis of
    disrupture of the plaque surface
  • Disrupture of the plaque could lead to creation
    of the labile thrombus (not fixed strongly to
    base) and our endogenous systems are able to
    destroy the thrombus partially nonstable angina
  • If the damage of the plaque surface is too deep
    to uncover collagen thrombosis is more
    intensive, as well as the thrombus is strongly
    fixed to basis, and endogenous mechanisms are not
    strong enough to destroy it MI
  • The most common cause of myocardial infarction is
    thrombosis of coronary arteries due to dysruption
    of the plaque surface.

39
  • Small plaques are usually rich in lipids and the
    tendency to complications
  • These plaques also show tendency to disruption in
    comparison to plaques with fibromuscular envelope
  • In general plaques with high risk of disruption
    are small, rich in lipids with increased
    activity of the macrophages inside the plaque.
  • Disruption of the plaque is usually caused by
    mechanical events acting on the plaque surface
    pressure, shearing or traction
  • internal pressure on the plaque surface -
    hypertension
  • changes of the vessel lumen - spasm of CA
  • moving of the arteries due to systolic/diastolic
    phase

40
Activity of the macrophages inside the plaque
  • MAC - uptake and metabolism of lipids ?
    formation of the plaque
  • MAC enhance transport and oxidation of LDL
  • MAC enhance production of mitogenic factors ?
    proliferation of smoth
  • muscle cells and neovascularisation of the plaque
  • MAC can release proteases ? digestion of
    extracellular matrix
  • risk for disruption
  • MAC release radicals
  • MAC can enhance
  • local thrombogenesis

http//www.nature.com/nature/journal/v420/n6917/fi
g_tab/nature01323_F1.html
41
Thrombosis inside the CA
  • Degree of thrombosis and duration of thrombus
    deposition are influenced by local and systemic
    factors present in the affected vessel during
    plaque disruption
  • These factors are necessary as triggers of
    different pathological processes in CA and their
    clinical manifestation

42
Local factors
  • Degree of plague disruption
  • Superficial damage of the plaque thrombogenic
    stimulus is relatively limited, resulting either
    in small mural thrombosis, or transient
    thrombotic occlusion similar to nonstable angina
    pectoris
  • Deeper damage or ulceration exposes collagen,
    tissue factor and other factors resulting to
    relatively persistent thrombotic occlusion MI
  • Degree of stenosis - platelet deposition
    increases with increased degree of stenosis,
    indicating shear-induced platelet activation
  • Residual thrombus predisposed to recurrent
    thrombotic occlusion

43
  • Residual thrombus
  • After organization and spontaneous lysis of the
    thrombi, there are small remnants residual
    thrombi
  • These residual thrombi predisposed patients with
    unstable angina or AMI to residual stenosis and
    to repeated thrombotic occlusion rethrombosis
    could by caused by
  • - residual mural thrombus encroaches into the
    vessel lumen
  • residual thrombus is one of the strongest
    thrombogenic surface probably due to increased
    thrombin activity
  • there is also increased activity of platelets and
    thrombin in the site of surrounding thrombolysis
  • Systemic thrombogenic factors
  • Primary hypercoagulative or thrombogenic states
    can favor local thrombosis (?level of circ.
    catecholamine, cigarette smoke,
    hypercholesterolemia)
  • Other metabolic abnormalities (? homocysteine
    level, impaired fybrinolysis, ? level of
    fibrinogene, factor VII)

44
Spasm of CA
  • Inversive angina Prinzmetal AP chest pain
    occures in rest condition, mainly in bed
  • Spasm of CA can result into acute myocardial
    infarction typical clinical signs, positive
    ECG, positive enzymes, but autopsy does not
    reveal the thrombus
  • Endothelial dysfunction is a consequence of ATS
    process
  • As we mentioned before normal endothelium
    reveal tendency to produce vasodilating
    molecules, but endothelium with impaired
    functions preffer production of pro constrictive
    substances
  • After provoking stimulus (catecholamine,
    pressure, emotive event) endothelium could
    produce vasconstrictvie molecules resulting into
    coronary artery occlusion due to spasm

http//www.invasivecardiology.com/article/1156
45
Summary of basic mechanisms responsible for
myocardial ischemia
  • Myocardial ischemia is the consequence of
    inappropriate blood
  • supply that leads to inbalance between oxygen
    supply
  • and real oxygen requirements

Inbalance is caused by reduction or complete
block of coronary blood flow, or by increased
requirement of oxygen for working cardiomyocytes,
these mechanisms are usually combined
  • Lumen of the coronary artery can be reduced to
    30-20 of
  • normal lumen without ischemia in subject in rest
    condition. But if this
  • patient will start the physical activity thus
    increasing oxygen
  • requirements, myocardial ischemia with chest pain
    can occur

46
  • Extension of myocardial ischemia depends on the
    level (site)
  • of arterial occlusion, size of the occluded
    vessel, presence and
  • quality of collateral circulation. Ischemic area
    could be small
  • microischemia or extremely large affecting more
    than 40 of
  • left ventricle mass
  • Intensity of myocardial ischemia may form mild
    forms to
  • strong and serious ischemia is depending on the
    tight of stenosis,
  • duration of vessel occlusion, collateral
    circulation and on the preload
  • and afterload of cardiomyocytes
  • Duration of myocardial ischemia can be transient
    short lasting,
  • can occur repeatedly or can be long lasting
    (permanent), if the
  • occlusion is permanent

47
Development of ischemic injury of myocardium
  • Myocardial cells become ischemic within 10 sec of
    coronary occlusion, no-flow ischemia
  • Early consequences
  • ATP production, ? contractility, enhanced
    glycogenolysis, intracellular acidosis,
    extracellular hyperkalemia, other ionic and
    metabolic disturbances
  • After several minutes of ischemia the cells lack
    the ability to contract, anaerobic processes take
    over, lactic acid is accumulated inside the
    cells, myocytes are edematous, content of
    glycogene is decreased and ultrastructural
    changes can be seen

48
  • Cardiac cells remain viable 20 min under these
    condition of non-flow ischemia, during this time
    they can be recovered if blood flow is restored
    to 20 min from the beginning of the heart attack
    there is only functional impairment of the
    cells
  • After this time irreversible changes
    (morphological changes) of the cells can be seen
    damage of intracellular organelles, more than
    20 min non flow status results into necrosis - MI
  • Consequences of myocardial ischemia include
    changes of electrophysiological properties of the
    cells and changes of mechanical properties the
    pump function

49
Electrophysiological changes
  • - Due to lack of ATP, ionic inbalance,
    accumulation of metabolic products, formation of
    free radicals and neurotransmitter release
  • - decrease of rest membrane potential due to
    increased extracellular level of K, decrease of
    RMP means that this value is nearer to 0 point
    /absolute value is decreased/ normal is -90 mV,
    after ischemia can be -70, - 60 mV
  • decrease of maximal speed of the action potential
    upstroke
  • changes of action potential duration
  • changes of excitability, refractoriness
  • onset of abnormal automacy
  • cell to cell electrical uncoupling
  • changes in conduction speed
  • These mechanisms could be responsible for
    arrhythmias

50
Mechanical properties
  • Decreased contractility of myocardial cells can
    be seen after several seconds of non flow status
  • Absolute contractile dysfunction is developed
    after 3-5 minutes of non flow status
  • After 10-15 min ischemic contracture
  • There are two mechanisms probably responsible for
    this phenomenon
  • Decrease of ATP level which is necessary for
    contraction
  • Rapidly developing intracellular acidosis
  • Intracellular acidosis leads to ionic inbalance
    and influence binding of Ca onto contractive
    elements myofibriles ? abnormality of
    excitatory and contractile cycle ? contractile
    dysfunction
  • For the same reasons myocardial relaxation is
    impaired

51
Intensity of contractile dysfunction depends on
intensity and duration of occlusion
  • Hypokinesis ischemic part of the ventricular
    wall moves during systolic and diastolic phase
    less than normal nonischemic myocardium
  • Akinesis ischemic wall does not move
  • Dyskinesis ischemic wall moves paradoxically
    during systolic and diastolic phase
  • Nonischemic myocardium has increased
    contractility as a compensatory reaction to
    improve cardiac output (sympathetic system, Frank
    Starling mechanism)
  • Contractile dysfunction is usually accompanied
    by diastolic dysfunction relaxation is also
    active process, decreasing ventricular compliance

52
Clinical signs of IHD
  • Chest pain
  • ECG abnormalities
  • Myocardial enzymes elevation
  • Systolic/diastolic heart failure

53
Symptoms and signs of IHD and mechanisms of their
onset
Chest pain stenocardia, is related to the
accumulation of some molecules within the
myocardium, which are able to stimulate afferent
nociceptive vagal fibers to induce pain these
molecules are lactic acid, potassium, proton,
adenosine... They may be ascribed as a products
or consequences of anaerobic metabolic
pathway Angina stable, nonstable This pain is
usually described as sharp, burning, pressure,
very intensive, the pain is spreading into the
left arm, carotid region, or into the
epigastrium, or interscapular region, is
accompanied with vegetative symptoms Silent
ischemia - Short lasting episodes of ischemie, no
affecting IVP, or distribution of vagal
nociceptive afferents, senile or diabetic
neuropathy
54
Symptoms and signs of IHD and mechanisms of their
onset
  • Nausea, vomiting general symptom, mostly in
    patients with diaphragmatic localization of MI
  • Fear, sweating, pallor, sudden diarrhea
    activation of vegetative NS
  • Dysrythmias premature beats, ventricular
    tachycardia, or flutter, different types of AV
    blocks electrophysiological changes
  • Signs of heart failure, or cardiogenic shock
    according to extent of MI

55
Myocardial enzymes
Legend A. Early CPK-MB isoforms after acute
MI B. Cardiac troponin after acute MI C.
CPK-MB after acute MI D. Cardiac troponin
after unstable angina
http//www.vetmed.vt.edu/education/Curriculum/VM83
04/vet20pathology/CASES/ISCHEMIA202006/PAGE1-19.
htm
56
http//cyhsanatomy1.wikispaces.com/WhatdoMyosin
andActindo3F
57
EKG diagnosis
  • ST segment elevation
  • ST segment depression
  • T wave inversion
  • Q wave formation

58
Ischemic Cycle
Ischemia / infarction
Diastolic Dysfunction
Systolic Dysfunction
chest pain
cardiac output
LV diastolic pressure
pulmonary congestion pO2
catecholamines
wall tension
(heart rate, BP)
MVO2
59
Reperfusion of ischemic myocardium
spontaneous or therapeutical
reperfusion after short lasting myocardial
ischemia could recover the cardiomyocytes and
restitute their function ad integrum
Stunned myocardium Total non flow ischemia does
not last to long to cause irreversible damage of
the cells necrosis But these cells lack the
ability to contract or their contractility is
significantly reduced it is a phenomenon of
stunned myocardium Decreased contractility could
be improved but this improvement requires time
(sometimes several days or weeks) Prolonged
depression of myocardial function present after
recovery of non flow ischemia is caused by
insensitivity of myofilaments to calcium
60
Hibernating myocardium
  • reversible reduction of power of contraction
    present during mild degree of coronary
    insufficiency
  • typical for chronic forms of coronary flow
    reduction and the myocardium could reduce
    contractility appropriately to reduced blood
    supply (down - regulation)
  • there is prolonged depression of contractility
    with simultaneous reduction of energy
    consumption, adequately to decreased blood flow
  • Just after the improvement of coronary blood flow
    the contractility becomes improved too
  • Contractile dysfunction is caused by reduced
    entrance of Ca into the cardiomyocytes

61
Contractile dysfunction in hypoxic, stunned and
hibernating myocardium
Ca2 transient amplitude
Myofilament Ca2 sensitivity
Maximal Ca2 activated press
Pi / pH i
Hypoxia
? ? /? ?
?
Stunning
? / ?
?
Hibernation
?? /

Pi - inorganic phosphate pHi - intracellular
pH ?- increased relative to control ? -
decreased - unchanged
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