The effect of deep hypothermia on the human pulmonary circulation

P Ariyaratnam, M Loubani, ARJ Cale… - Journal of Thermal …, 2014 - Elsevier
P Ariyaratnam, M Loubani, ARJ Cale, M Chaudhry, ME Cowen, MA Jarvis, S Griffin…
Journal of Thermal Biology, 2014Elsevier
Objective Acute rises in pulmonary artery pressures following complex cardiac surgery are
associated with high morbidity and mortality. We hypothesised that periods of deep
hypothermia predispose to elevated pulmonary pressures upon rewarming. We investigated
the effect of this hypothermic preconditioning on isolated human pulmonary arteries and
isolated perfused lungs. Methods Isometric tension was measured in human pulmonary
artery rings (n= 24). We assessed the constriction and dilation of these arteries at 37° C and …
Objective
Acute rises in pulmonary artery pressures following complex cardiac surgery are associated with high morbidity and mortality. We hypothesised that periods of deep hypothermia predispose to elevated pulmonary pressures upon rewarming. We investigated the effect of this hypothermic preconditioning on isolated human pulmonary arteries and isolated perfused lungs.
Methods
Isometric tension was measured in human pulmonary artery rings (n=24). We assessed the constriction and dilation of these arteries at 37 °C and 17 °C. Isolated perfused human lung models consisted of lobes ventilated via a bronchial cannula and perfused with Krebs via a pulmonary artery cannula. Bronchial and pulmonary artery pressures were recorded. We investigated the effect of temperature using a heat exchanger.
Results
Rewarming from 17 °C to 37 °C caused a 1.3 fold increase in resting tension (p<0.05). Arteries constricted 8.6 times greater to 30 nM KCl, constricted 17 times greater to 1 nM Endothelin-1 and dilated 30.3 times greater to 100 μM SNP at 37 °C than at 17 °C (p<0.005). No difference was observed in the responses of arteries originally maintained at 37 °C compared to those arteries maintained at 17 °C and rewarmed to 37 °C. Hypothermia blunted the increase in pulmonary artery pressures to stimulants such as potassium chloride as well as to H-R but did not precondition arteries to higher pulmonary artery pressures upon re-warming.
Conclusions
Deep hypothermia reduces the responsiveness of human pulmonary arteries but does not, however, precondition an exaggerated response to vasoactive agents upon re-warming.
Elsevier