In contrast to their peripheral tissues and coronary vasculature, the myocardium of patients with NIDDM expresses a competent insulin-response system with respect to glucose metabolism. This suggests that insulin resistance is mediated at the level of individual organs and that different mechanisms are involved in muscle and vascular tissue.
Background-Rapid reperfusion of an occluded coronary artery salvages regional mechanical function, but this benefit may not be realized for hours or days because of postischemic stunning. Recovery from stunning is incompletely understood but may involve adaptive changes in heart glucose metabolism. Methods and Results-To examine whether reversible coronary occlusion produces sustained changes in regional glucose metabolism in vivo, we performed a 20-minute left coronary artery occlusion followed by 24 hours of open-artery reperfusion in intact rats.
Menopausal status is a risk factor for coronary artery disease death, but the mechanism underlying this association is uncertain. To test whether estrogen ameliorates the effects of acute myocardial ischemia in ways likely to translate into a mortality difference, we compared the response to brief (6-min) and prolonged (45-min) coronary occlusion in vivo in five groups (each n = 16) of rats: ovariectomized females; ovariectomized females after 6 wk 17beta-estradiol replacement; male rats supplemented with estradiol for 6 wk; normal males; and normal females. Coronary occlusion produced a uniform ischemic risk area averaging 53 +/- 3% of left ventricular volume. After a brief occlusion, reperfusion ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation occurred with >85% frequency in all groups. During a prolonged occlusion, ischemic ventricular tachycardia occurred in 100% and sustained tachycardia requiring cardioversion in >75% of rats in all groups. Myocardial infarct size averaged 52 +/- 4% of the ischemic risk area and was similarly unaffected by gender or estrogen status. We conclude that neither short-term estrogen withdrawal, replacement, nor supplementation significantly affects the potentially lethal outcomes from acute coronary occlusion in this species.
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