1. Academic Validation
  2. The nitric oxide donor, diethylamine NONOate, enhances preservation of the donor rat heart

The nitric oxide donor, diethylamine NONOate, enhances preservation of the donor rat heart

  • J Heart Lung Transplant. 1998 Nov;17(11):1113-20.
Z Y Du 1 M Hicks P Jansz S Rainer P Spratt P Macdonald
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Cardiopulmonary Transplant Unit, St Vincent's Hospital, Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia.
PMID: 9855451
Abstract

Background: Ischemia/reperfusion injury to transplanted organs may be associated with loss of endothelial release of nitric oxide. The aim of this study was to determine whether supplementation of an extracellular-based cardioplegic solution in routine clinical use at our institution with nitric oxide (as diethylamine NONOate) enhanced poststorage functionality of an isolated working heart model.

Methods: Excised hearts were ligated to an aortic cannula and immediately perfused retrogradely with oxygenated Krebs solution at a hydrostatic pressure of 100 cm H2O at 37 degrees C. This preparation was then converted to a working system by switching the supply of perfusate from the aorta to a left atrial cannula at a filling pressure of 15 cm H2O. After a 1-minute stabilization period, baseline measurements of heart rate, aortic flow, coronary artery flow, and cardiac output were performed. Oxygenated cardioplegic solution (0.1 micromol/L), with or without NONOate, was then infused into the coronary circulation. Hearts were then stored in the same solutions for 6 or 12 hours at 2 degrees to 3 degrees C. The hearts were then remounted on the perfusion apparatus and reperfused as before, and hemodynamic measurements were repeated. Water content of the hearts were then determined.

Results: Addition of the nitric oxide donor significantly improved all hemodynamic parameters measured after 12 hours storage and aortic flow at 6 hours storage compared with the untreated control groups. There was no significant difference between the water contents of the NONOate-treated and control groups.

Conclusions: The presence of the nitric oxide donor diethylamine NONOate was associated with significantly better preservation of coronary artery flow and cardiac function in the isolated rat heart after a 12-hour period of hypothermic storage and suggests a novel use for this family of compounds in the transplantation context.

Figures
Products