Time course of coronary endothelial dysfunction in acute untreated rejection after heterotopic heart transplantation.

LP Perrault, JP Bidouard, P Janiak… - The Journal of Heart …, 1997 - europepmc.org
LP Perrault, JP Bidouard, P Janiak, N Villeneuve, P Bruneval, JP Vilaine, PM Vanhoutte
The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation: the Official Publication …, 1997europepmc.org
Background Endothelial dysfunction is one of the early events leading to atherosclerosis. It
occurs early after orthotopic heart transplantation and precedes the appearance of
accelerated graft coronary artery disease believed to stem from chronic rejection of the
endothelium. Acute rejection may contribute to the development of graft vasculopathy.
Methods To assess the time course and specific mechanisms of coronary endothelial
dysfunction in acute untreated rejection, a swine model of retroperitoneal heterotopic heart …
Background
Endothelial dysfunction is one of the early events leading to atherosclerosis. It occurs early after orthotopic heart transplantation and precedes the appearance of accelerated graft coronary artery disease believed to stem from chronic rejection of the endothelium. Acute rejection may contribute to the development of graft vasculopathy.
Methods
To assess the time course and specific mechanisms of coronary endothelial dysfunction in acute untreated rejection, a swine model of retroperitoneal heterotopic heart transplantation was used. Large white swine (age 10+/-2 weeks, weight 25+/-5 kg) were serum-typed for class I antigen of the swine leukocyte antigen system and selected to ensure a similar degree of incompatibility. Donor hearts were preserved with normothermic blood cardioplegia and regional hypothermia; the mean ischemic time was 64+/-15 minutes. Myocardial contractility decreased from day 5 (normal) to day 14 (weak), but electrical activity was preserved. All coronary arteries were patent, and International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation grade 4 rejection was present in all hearts beyond 5 days. The endothelial function of epicardial coronary arterial rings of native and transplanted hearts was studied in organ chambers filled with modified Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate solution and compared 1, 5, 9, and 14 days after transplantation.
Results
Maximal endothelium-independent relaxations were unaffected at all stages. Endothelium-dependent relaxations to serotonin and alpha 2-adrenergic agonist UK 14304 (which activate receptors coupled to Gi-proteins) and to sodium fluoride (a direct G-protein activator) deteriorated progressively over time. At 14 days maximal relaxations to the calcium ionophore A23187, adenosine diphosphate, and bradykinin were also reduced, but to a lesser degree than those to serotonin and sodium fluoride. Histomorphometric studies of the allograft coronary artery rings showed progressive intimal hyperplasia from day 5 to day 14, with an increase in the incidence from 29%+/-8.3% to 61.5%+/-12%.
Conclusions
These studies show that endothelial dysfunction in untreated acute rejection after heart transplantation develops beyond 5 days and initially involves G-proteins; the dysfunction worsens over time to finally affect all endothelial mechanisms and vascular smooth muscle. The progression of the associated intimal hyperplasia parallels the alteration in endothelial function, suggesting a permissive role of the dysfunction in the development of this acute form of coronary graft vasculopathy.
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