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Original Article

Nitroxide Radicals Prevent Metal-aggravated Reperfusion Injury in Isolated Rat Heart

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Pages 627-636 | Received 19 Jun 1997, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The effects of Cu(II) and the stable nitroxide radical 4-OH-2, 2, 6, 6-tetramethyl-piperidine-1-oxyl (TPL) on reperfusion injury following global myocardial ischemia have been studied using the isolated rat heart model in the Langendorff configuration. Hearts were equilibrated with Krebs-Henseleit buffer (KH-buffer) for 10 min and subjected to 18 min of normothermic global ischemia. After 20 min reperfusion, hemodynamic parameters recovered as follows: ventricular developed pressure (77%), dP/dt (71%) and -dP/dt (80%), heart rate (91%), and work index (70%). End-diastolic pressure was 16 mm Hg. When 10μM Cu-nitrilotriacetate or Cu-(histidine)2 was included in the perfusate before, during, and following ischemia, the heart injury was more extensive and the work index only recovered to 17% of the preischemic value. The inclusion of 100μM TPL during reperfusion abolished the copper-induced sensi-tization. In the absence of copper, TPL did not provide any protection against ischemia-reperfusion damage to the heart. The inclusion of 100μM 1, 4-dihydroxy-2, 2, 6, 6-tetramethylpiperidine (TPL-H) during reperfusion, partially abolished the copper-induced sensitization. Since conversion between TPL and TPL-H takes place, the fact that both forms provide protection can increase their protective efficacy.

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