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      Influence of global ischemia on intracellular sodium in the perfused rat heart.

      Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
      Animals, Coronary Disease, metabolism, Heart, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Male, Myocardium, analysis, Oxazoles, diagnostic use, Perfusion, Pyrimidinones, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Sodium, Spectrophotometry, Atomic, Thulium

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          Abstract

          Intracellular [Na+], [H+], and [ATP] and mechanical performance were measured in the isovolumic perfused rat heart during ischemia. The concentration of intracellular sodium, [Na+]i, was determined by atomic absorption spectroscopy under control conditions, and [Na+]i was monitored by 23Na NMR spectroscopy at 1-min intervals under control conditions and during global ischemia. [ATP], [H+], and [Pi] were measured by 31P NMR in a separate group under identical conditions. The control [Na+]i measured by atomic absorption was 30.7 +/- 3.3 mM (mean +/- SD, n = 6), and [Na+]i measured by NMR was 6.2 +/- 0.5 mM (n = 3). Brief ischemia (10 min) was associated with a 54% increase in [Na+]i which reversed completely with reperfusion. Developed pressure also returned to control values upon reperfusion. Prolonged ischemia (30 min) produced continuous further accumulation of sodium (0.53 mM/min, r2 = 0.99). [H+] also increased approximately linearly early in ischemia (0.084 microM/min, r2 = 0.97). The rate of increase in [Na+]i was more than 4000 times greater than the increase in [H+] on a molar basis. Nevertheless, [H+]/[Na+]i increased early in ischemia because the proportional change in [H+] was greater than that in [Na+]i. These results indicate that (1) intracellular sodium measured by NMR in the functioning heart is about 20% of total intracellular sodium; (2) intracellular acidosis and accumulation of sodium develop simultaneously during global ischemia; (3) increased intracellular sodium content is not in itself an indicator of irreversible injury; and (4) recovery of mechanical performance is associated with return of [Na+]i (measured by NMR) to baseline after brief ischemia. The mechanism of the increase in sodium content detected by NMR is unknown.

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