Experimental coronary artery occlusion. I. Measurement of infarct size.
Schlüsselwörter
Abstrakt
We studied the size of infarcts in 25 dogs 48 hrs after proximal occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery. In one group of animals infarct size was measured by histologic criteria, in another group the infarct was measured macrohistochemically using p-NBT and malate to incubate unfixed slices of myocardium. In both groups infarct size was expressed as percentage of the area of perfusion of the occluded artery. Infarct size was 72% of the area-at-risk in the group studied by histology and 74.5% in the macrohistochemical group. The satisfactory agreement of both methods favors the p-NBT technique because of its ease and speed. It is suggested that the expression of infarct size as percentage of the perfusion area is a good definition and should be used in experiments designed to manipulate infarct size. In this way differences in the size of occluded arteries and their respective perfusion areas have no or only a negligible influence on infarct size.