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Cardiac sympathectomy and spinal cord stimulation attenuate reflex-mediated norepinephrine release during ischemia preventing ventricular fibrillation
Jeffrey L. Ardell, … , J. Andrew Armour, Kalyanam Shivkumar
Jeffrey L. Ardell, … , J. Andrew Armour, Kalyanam Shivkumar
Published October 31, 2019
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2019;4(23):e131648. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.131648.
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Research Article Cardiology Neuroscience

Cardiac sympathectomy and spinal cord stimulation attenuate reflex-mediated norepinephrine release during ischemia preventing ventricular fibrillation

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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to define the mechanism by which cardiac neuraxial decentralization or spinal cord stimulation (SCS) reduces ischemia-induced ventricular fibrillation (VF). Direct measurements of norepinephrine (NE) levels in the left ventricular interstitial fluid (ISF) by microdialysis, in response to transient (15-minute) coronary artery occlusion (CAO), were performed in anesthetized canines. Responses were studied in animals with intact neuraxes and were compared with those in which the intrathoracic component of the cardiac neuraxes (stellate ganglia) or the intrinsic cardiac neuronal (ICN) system was surgically delinked from the central nervous system and those with intact neuraxes with preemptive SCS (T1–T3). With intact neuraxes, animals with exaggerated NE release due to CAO were at increased risk for VF. During CAO, there was a 152% increase in NE when the neuraxes were intact compared with 114% following stellate decentralization and 16% following ICN decentralization. During SCS, CAO NE levels increased by 59%. Risk for CAO-induced VF was 38% in controls, 8% following decentralization, and 11% following SCS. These data indicate that ischemia-related afferent neuronal transmission differentially engages central and intrathoracic sympathetic reflexes and amplifies sympathoexcitation. Differences in regional ventricular NE release are associated with increased risk for VF. Surgical decentralization or SCS reduced NE release and VF.

Authors

Jeffrey L. Ardell, Robert D. Foreman, J. Andrew Armour, Kalyanam Shivkumar

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Figure 4

LV norepinephrine release following neuraxial decentralization.

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LV norepinephrine release following neuraxial decentralization.
LV ISF n...
LV ISF norepinephrine (NE) levels in the ventral region perfused by the circumflex coronary artery (normal zone), LV midwall region (border zone), and the region perfused by the LAD coronary artery (ischemic zone) at baseline, during LAD CAO, and reperfusion. These data were derived from animals with intact neuraxes (A, control, group1, n = 7) versus those in which the intrathoracic nervous system was acutely decentralized (stellate decent, stellate ganglia decentralized and cervical vagosympathetic complexes cut) (B, group 2, n = 6) versus those in which the intrinsic cardiac nervous system (ICN) was surgically decentralized from all extracardiac neuronal inputs (C, ICN Decent, group 3, n = 6). *P ≤ 0.01 from baseline; +P ≤ 0.03 from baseline; #P ≤ 0.05 from baseline, repeated-measure ANOVA, with Holm-Sidak method for pairwise multiple comparison.

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