Abstract
The postischemic cardioprotection by calcium antagonists and the interplay between neutrophils and regional myocardial blood flow were investigated further, using clentiazem, a new potent calcium channel blocker derived from diltiazem. A 90-min occlusion of the interventricular coronary artery was followed by 6 hr of reperfusion in anesthetized dogs. One group was given clentiazem: 100 micrograms/kg at 5 min before reperfusion followed by a perfusion of 1 microgram/kg/min until sacrifice; controls received saline. Infarct size (% of area at risk) estimated with triphenyltetrazolium staining and by histology was reduced by nearly 50% (P < .05) in treated (16.6 +/- 3.0%), as compared to control (31.6 +/- 6.3%) dogs. Regional and collateral myocardial flows estimated with radioactive microspheres were similar between groups before and during occlusion. However, after an initial recovery to preocclusion values at 30-min reperfusion in both groups, flow declined to 50% normal (P < .05) in control animals after 3 and 6 hr in midwall and subendocardium, but the change was remarkably attenuated (P < .05) in subendocardium of clentiazem-treated dogs. Also, neutrophil accumulation at the epicardial side of the infarct, at the edge of salvaged myocardium, and estimated by tissue myeloperoxidase measurement, was reduced by 50% in treated dogs (clentiazem: 17.2 +/- 2.8; controls: 32.3 +/- 2.7 x 10(6) neutrophils/g). We conclude that administration of clentiazem at reperfusion reduces infarct size by interfering with both neutrophil accumulation and development of subendocardial no reflow in reperfused myocardium.
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