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1.
Corneal tolerance of vitrifiable concentrations of glycerol.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
S J Rich  W J Armitage 《Cryobiology》1992,29(2):153-164
Equilibration of corneas with sufficiently high concentrations of cryoprotectants to inhibit potentially damaging ice formation during cryopreservation has not yet been achieved. This study examined the effects on the structure and function of rabbit corneal endothelium of the low toxicity cryoprotectant glycerol. Corneas were exposed to concentrations ranging from 2.0 to 6.8 M glycerol in a Hepes-buffered Ringer's solution containing glutathione, adenosine, 5 mM sodium bicarbonate and 6% w/v bovine serum albumin. Endothelial function was assessed by monitoring corneal thickness during perfusion of the endothelial surface at 34 degrees C for 6 h. Endothelial structure was observed using specular microscopy during perfusion and scanning electron microscopy after perfusion. Corneas tolerated exposure to 2.0 and 3.4 M glycerol for 20 min at 4 and -5 degrees C, respectively. Tolerance of 4.8 M glycerol for 10 min at -10 degrees C was improved by decreasing the dilution temperatures. Ten-minute exposure to 6.1 and 6.8 M glycerol was tolerated at -15 degrees C. In all cases corneas initially showed signs of damage but endothelial function was regained following structural repair. Corneas exposed to 6.8 M glycerol and cooled below the glass transition temperature were nonfunctional after warming. Ice formation during warming was believed to be the cause of injury.  相似文献   

2.
S J Rich  W J Armitage 《Cryobiology》1991,28(4):314-326
Corneas must first be equilibrated with multimolar concentrations of cryoprotectants if the formation of ice during cryopreservation is to be avoided by vitrification at practicable cooling rates. Rabbit corneas were exposed to equimolar mixtures of the cryoprotectants propane-1,2-diol and glycerol in a Hepes-buffered Ringer's solution containing glutathione, adenosine, 5 mmol/liter sodium bicarbonate, and 6% w/v bovine serum albumin. Endothelial function was assessed by monitoring its ability to control stromal hydration during perfusion of the endothelial surface at 34 degrees C for 6 h. Endothelial morphology was observed by specular microscopy during perfusion and by scanning electron microscopy after perfusion. Endothelial pump activity and structural integrity of the endothelial layer were demonstrated after 20 min exposure at 4 degrees C to a total concentration of 1.4 mol/liter cryoprotectant (i.e., 0.7 mol/liter propane-1,2-diol + 0.7 mol/liter glycerol). Exposure to 2.0 and 3.4 mol/liter cryoprotectant for 20 min at 4 degrees and -5 degrees C, respectively, resulted in initial endothelial damage; but this repaired and a functioning endothelial pump was subsequently demonstrated. Although exposure to 4.1 mol/liter cryoprotectant for 10 min at -10 degrees C caused irreparable damage to 2/4 corneas, reduced dilution temperatures together with increased dilution time allowed exposure to 4.8 and 5.5 mol/liter cryoprotectant with retention of endothelial pump activity. Exposure to 6.1 mol/liter cryoprotectant for 10 min at -15 degrees C caused endothelial damage which was not mitigated by the presence of 2.5% w/v chondroitin sulfate. Endothelial function may be improved by further modification of addition and dilution protocols or by exposure to the cryoprotectants at lower temperatures.  相似文献   

3.
Corneal tolerance of vitrifiable concentrations of propane-1,2-diol   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
S J Rich  W J Armitage 《Cryobiology》1991,28(2):159-170
The merit of corneal cryopreservation by vitrification as opposed to conventional freezing is the avoidance of ice damage which is believed to disrupt the integrity of the corneal endothelium resulting in loss of corneal transparency. The cornea must be equilibrated with high concentrations of cryoprotectant in order to achieve vitrification at practicable cooling rates. In an earlier study, corneas were exposed to 3.4 mol/liter propane-1,2-diol (Rich and Armitage (1990) Cryobiology 27, 42-54). The present study exposed rabbit corneas to concentrations of propane-1,2-diol between 3.4 and 5.4 mol/liter in a Hepes-buffered Ringer's solution containing glutathione, adenosine, 5 mmol/liter sodium bicarbonate, 6% (w/v) bovine serum albumin, and 2.5% (w/v) dextran sulfate. Dextran sulfate was as effective as chondroitin sulfate at improving endothelial tolerance of 3.4 mol/liter propane-1,2-diol. This beneficial effect may be linked to the polyanionic nature of these molecules. Corneas exposed to 5.4 mol/liter propane-1,2-diol were cooled in liquid nitrogen vapor at a temperature of -140 degrees C for 2 h. Warming was achieved by direct transfer to a dilution solution at -10 degrees C. Endothelial function was assessed by monitoring corneal thickness during perfusion of the endothelial surface at 34 degrees C for 6 h. Endothelial structure was observed by specular microscopy during the perfusion and by scanning electron microscopy after perfusion. Corneas tolerated exposure to 3.4 mol/liter propane-1,2-diol for 20 min at 0 degrees C and to 4.1 mol/liter for 10 min at -10 degrees C. Exposure to 4.8 and 5.4 mol/liter for 10 min at -10 degrees C caused endothelial damage, although a degree of endothelial function was retained. Function following exposure to 5.4 mol/liter was improved by reducing the temperature of exposure to -15 degrees C. Corneas cooled after exposure to 5.4 mol/liter propane-1,2-diol for 10 min at -15 degrees C apparently vitrified, but devitrified on warming. The corneas swelled to such an extent during perfusion that the endothelium could not be viewed by specular microscopy, subsequent scanning electron microscopy showed a severely disrupted endothelium.  相似文献   

4.
Any method of cryopreservation of the cornea must maintain integrity of the corneal endothelium, a monolayer of cells on the inner surface of the cornea that controls corneal hydration and keeps the cornea thin and transparent. During freezing, the formation of ice damages the endothelium, and vitrification has been suggested as a means of achieving ice-free cryopreservation of the cornea. To achieve vitrification at practicable cooling rates, tissues must be equilibrated with high concentrations of cryoprotectants. In this study, the effects of propane-1,2-diol on the structure and function of rabbit corneal endothelium were studied. Corneas were exposed to concentrations of propane-1,2-diol ranging from 10 to 30% v/v in a Hepes-buffered Ringer's solution containing glutathione, adenosine, 5 mmol/liter sodium bicarbonate, and 6% w/v bovine serum albumin. Endothelial function was assessed by monitoring corneal thickness during perfusion of the endothelial surface at 34 degrees C for 6 hr. Exposure to 10-15% v/v propane-1,2-diol was well tolerated for 20 min at 4 degrees C when the cryoprotectant was removed in steps or by sucrose dilution. However, exposure to 25% v/v propane-1,2-diol for 20 min at 0 or -5 degrees C was consistently tolerated only when 2.5% w/v chondroitin sulfate was included in the vehicle solution. Exposure to 30% v/v propane-1,2-diol was harmful at -5 and -10 degrees C. The endothelial damage following exposure to 30% v/v propane-1,2-diol was probably the result of a toxic effect rather than osmotic stress. Although 25% v/v propane-1,2-diol does not vitrify at cooling rates that are practicable for corneas, it could at this concentration form a major component of a vitrification solution comprising a mixture of cryoprotectants.  相似文献   

5.
AIM: To investigate the influence of low cooling rates on endothelial function and morphology of corneas frozen with propane-1,2-diol (PROH). METHODS: Rabbit corneas, mounted on support rings, were exposed to 1.4mol/l (10% v/v) PROH, seeded to initiate freezing, and cooled at 0.2 or 1 degrees C/min to -80 degrees C. Corneas were frozen immersed in liquid or suspended in air. After being held overnight in liquid nitrogen, corneas were warmed at 1 or 20 degrees C/min. After stepwise removal of the cryoprotectant, the ability of the endothelium actively to control corneal hydration was monitored during normothermic perfusion. Morphology was assessed after staining with trypan blue and alizarin red S, and by specular microscopy during perfusion. RESULTS: Functional survival was achieved only after slow cooling (0.2 degrees C/min) with the cornea immersed in the cryoprotectant medium, and rapid warming (20 degrees C/min). These conditions also gave the best morphology after freezing and thawing. CONCLUSION: Cooling rates lower than those typically applied to cornea improved functional survival of the endothelium. This result is in accord with previous observations showing the benefit of low cooling rates for cell monolayers [CryoLetters 17 (1996) 213-218].  相似文献   

6.
W J Armitage 《Cryobiology》1989,26(4):318-327
Corneal endothelium, a monolayer of cells lining the inner surface of the cornea, is particularly susceptible to freezing injury. Ice formation damages the structural and functional integrity of the endothelium, and this results in a loss of corneal transparency. Instead of freezing, an alternative method of cryopreservation is vitrification, which avoids damage associated with ice formation. Vitrification at practicable cooling rates, however, requires exposure of tissues to very high concentrations of cryoprotectants, and this can cause damage through chemical toxicity and osmotic stress. The effects of a vitrification solution (VS1) containing 2.62 mol/liter (20.5%, w/v) dimethyl sulfoxide, 2.62 mol/liter (15.5%, w/v) acetamide, 1.32 mol/liter (10%, w/v) propane-1,2-diol, and 6% (w/v) polyethylene glycol were studied on corneal endothelium. Endothelial function was assessed by monitoring corneal thickness during 6 hr of perfusion at 35 degrees C with a Ringer solution supplemented with glutathione and adenosine. Various dilutions of the vitrification solution were introduced and removed in a stepwise manner to mitigate osmotic stress. Survival of endothelium after exposure to VS1 or a solution containing 90% of the cryoprotectant concentrations in VS1 (90% VS1) was dependent on the duration of exposure, the temperature of exposure, and the dilution protocol. The basic dilution protocol was performed at 25 degrees C: corneas were transferred from 90% VS1 or VS1 into 50% VS1 for 15 min, followed by 25% VS1 for 15 min and finally into isosmotic Ringer solution. Using this protocol, corneal endothelium survived exposure to 90% VS1 for 15 min at -5 degrees C, but 5 min in VS1 at -5 degrees C was harmful and resulted in some very large and misshapen endothelial cells. This damage was not ameliorated by using a sucrose dilution technique; but endothelial function was improved when the temperature of exposure to VS1 was reduced from -5 to -10 degrees C. Exposure to VS1 for 5 min at -5 degrees C was well tolerated, however, when the temperature of the first dilution step into 50% VS1 was reduced from 25 to 0 degree C. The large, misshapen cells were not observed under these conditions nor after exposure to VS1 at -10 degrees C. These results suggested that damage was the result of cryoprotectant toxicity rather than osmotic stress. Thus, corneal endothelium survived exposure to two solutions of cryoprotectants, namely, 90% VS1 and VS1, that were sufficiently concentrated to vitrify. Whether corneas can be cooled fast enough in these solutions to achieve vitrification and warmed fast enough to avoid devitrification remains to be determined.  相似文献   

7.
Effects of osmotic stress on rabbit corneal endothelium   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effects of osmotic stress on corneal endothelium were investigated by exposing rabbit corneas to anisosmotic conditions, and then perfusing the corneas with isosmotic glutathione bicarbonate Ringer solution for 4 hr at 35 degrees C. During the perfusion, endothelial function was assessed by measuring corneal thickness with a specular microscope. After perfusion, the corneas were prepared for scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Endothelial ultrastructure and function were well maintained after exposure to a wide range of osmolality (0.12-2.7 osmol/kg), but this tolerance of osmotic stress was dependent both on the duration and the temperature of exposure to the anisosmotic conditions. Exposure to an osmolality of 2.7 osmol/kg for 15 min at 23 or 37 degrees C resulted in gross damage to the endothelium when the hyperosmotic agent was sodium chloride. This damage was not the result of increased osmolality per se nor cellular shrinkage because the endothelium tolerated exposure to a sucrose solution of the same osmolality for 15 min at 37 degrees C. The detrimental effect of sodium chloride, however, was mitigated by reducing the temperature of exposure to 0 degrees C or reducing the duration of exposure to 5 min. These results suggest that endothelial cells become more tolerant of high electrolyte concentrations with reducing temperature, and this could be an important factor in the survival of the endothelium in corneal cryopreservation. The results also help to define the limits of osmotic shrinkage and swelling tolerated by endothelial cells. This will be of value in overcoming the detrimental osmotic effects associated with the addition and, in particular, the removal of cryoprotectants.  相似文献   

8.
Corneal cryopreservation with dextran.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Different methods of corneal cryopreservation have been introduced, those employing intracellular cryoprotectants such as Me2SO or glycerol being the most widely favored. We investigated the influence of several freeze-thaw trauma variables on the survival of porcine endothelial monolayers when employing the extracellular cryoprotective agent dextran. We first examined the effects of various dextran concentrations and then, having ascertained the optimal concentration, further investigated the influence of fetal calf serum (FCS) concentration in the cryopreservation medium, the cooling rate, the thawing temperature, and the length of the preincubation in the freezing medium prior to cryopreservation. The numerical densities of endothelial cells were determined at dissection in hypoosmotic balanced salt solution and after organ culture by staining with alizarin red S and trypan blue. Morphological evaluation was not performed directly after thawing but after a subsequent organ culture at 37 degrees C to detect latent cell damage after freeze-thaw trauma. Our data revealed that corneas cryopreserved in minimal essential medium containing 10% dextran but lacking FCS, preincubated for 3 h, frozen at a cooling rate of 1 degrees C/min, and thawed at 37 degrees C incurred the lowest cell losses (22.4%, SD +/- 3.8). We conclude that dextran is an effective cryoprotectant for freezing of porcine corneas. However, variations between species in the results of cryopreservation require further investigation of an in vivo animal model and studies with human corneas before its clinical use can be recommended.  相似文献   

9.
B K Kim  M G Baldini 《Cryobiology》1986,23(3):209-213
Platelet response to glycerol gradient was studied using a few in vitro parameters. These were platelet count, mean platelet size, platelet response to hypotonic stress (PHRS), and collagen-induced platelet aggregation. An equal volume of 1-10% (w/v) glycerol in plasma was added at once to the platelet concentrate resulting in 0.5-5% (w/v) final glycerol concentration. The concentrate was kept at 22 degrees C for 60 min. Platelets were then separated by one centrifugation and resuspended in glycerol-free plasma. A loss in platelet count was observed when the gradient of glycerol was more than 3%. This was associated with an increase in mean cell size and a reduction in aggregability. With 5% glycerol stress, a loss of 30% in cell count, an increase in 18% in cell size, and a 78% loss in aggregability was observed. Declining of PRHS was shown already with a 1% glycerol gradient and 69% of this function was suppressed by 5% glycerol stress. In other experiments, 5% glycerol was first added, them removed in 5 steps with a gradient of 1% each. When time interval between each step was less than 0.5 min, platelet loss and PRHS reduction were 17 and 47% respectively. These values were gradually improved to 4% and 11-20%, respectively, as increasing time interval up to 15 min. It was concluded that a gradient of 1% glycerol and a 15-min interval for each step minimizes the detrimental osmotic stress on platelets while glycerol is added or removed. Our findings may lead up to devising an improved protocol for platelet cryopreservation with glycerol.  相似文献   

10.
Transplantation of cryopreserved human corneas in a xenograft model   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
An ideal model to test methods of corneal storage for transplantation would simulate the environment of the grafted human cornea and predict the success of clinical corneal transplants (human to human). In this study, we tested such a model, the corneal xenograft (human to cat). Nine pairs of human corneas were transplanted into both eyes of nine recipient cats. One cornea of each pair was cryopreserved at -196 degrees C in 2.5 M dimethyl sulfoxide while the other was stored in preservative medium at 4 degrees C (control) for 6 +/- 2 (mean +/- SD) days before transplantation. One week after transplantation, the cats were euthanized and the eyes were examined. Three of the grafts (all cryopreserved) were clinical failures and showed no survival of donor corneal endothelial cells on scanning electron microscopy. The remaining six pairs of grafts were examined with a specular microscope and showed endothelial cell losses of 48 +/- 16% in cryopreserved and 8 +/- 16% in control corneas (p < 0.05). This survival is similar to survival in an earlier corneal perfusion model. The nine cryopreserved grafts were thicker than the control grafts, had fewer surviving keratocytes in the central stroma, and had more apoptotic central keratocytes (TUNEL assay). This failure rate in cryopreserved corneas clearly shows that this technique of cryopreservation was not adequate for clinical use. The corneal xenograft model can be used to study cellular survival and apoptosis in vivo after preservation as well as to test new methods of corneal preservation before initiating clinical trials.  相似文献   

11.
Isolated perfused rat livers were exposed for 30 min at 35 °C to 10 and 15% (v/v) solutions of polyethyleneoxide with a mean molecular weight of 400. A dual-circuit perfusion system was employed to ensure efficient removal of the polyethyleneoxide from the liver.Bile production and urea synthesis by the livers was depressed during exposure to polyethyleneoxide but resumed within 30 min after its removal. The ability of the livers to maintain a constant concentration of glucose in perfusates and their retention of both potassium and aspartate aminotransferase were also altered after exposure to the cryoprotectant.Polyethyleneoxide at 10% (v/v) was considered to be relatively nontoxic toward the isolated rat liver and it therefore shows promise as a cryoprotective compound which may allow long-term storage of the liver at subzero temperatures.  相似文献   

12.
Cryoinjury in endothelial cell monolayers   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Developing successful cryopreservation strategies for corneas have proven to be more difficult than anticipated, because of the resulting loss of viability and detachment of endothelial cells from Descemet's membrane following cryopreservation of corneas. The objectives of this study are to develop a more detailed understanding of cryoinjury in human corneal endothelial cell (HCEC) monolayers and to examine the effects of storage temperature, cryoprotectant type and concentration, and cooling/warming rates on HCEC monolayers. Monolayers of endothelial cells attached to collagen-coated glass, immersed in an experimental solution (with and without cryoprotectant) were cooled at 1 degrees C/min to various temperatures (-5 to -40 degrees C), then thawed directly or cooled rapidly to -196 or to -80 degrees C before thawing. Cryoprotectants used were dimethyl sulfoxide and propylene glycol in concentrations of 1 and 2M. Monolayers were assessed for membrane integrity and detachment using SYTO/ethidium bromide fluorescent stain. The presence of cryoprotectants resulted in high recovery of membrane integrity and low monolayer detachment in monolayers thawed directly from temperatures down to -40 degrees C. In contrast, there was excessive detachment and loss of membrane integrity in monolayers cooled to -196 degrees C compared to monolayers cooled to -80 degrees C. Also, increasing cryoprotectant concentrations did not improve recovery of the monolayers. The higher recovery and lower detachment after storage at -80 degrees C compared to storage at -196 degrees C suggest that storage temperatures for corneas should be re-evaluated.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of glutaraldehyde on the uptake of L-alanine, and subsequent germination, in spores of Bacillus subtilis NCTC 8236 was examined. Germination was induced by single amino acids, D-glucose and phosphate buffer at 37 degrees C. L-alanine was the best germinant of all amino acids tested. Pretreatment of spores with low concentrations of acid and alkaline glutaraldehyde inhibited subsequent germination, complete inhibition being observed at concentrations of 0.1% (w/v). This concentration also prevented the loss of heat resistance of spores placed in germination medium and exposed to 75 degrees C. Radioactive studies indicated that maximum uptake of L-alanine occurred after ca 30 min at 37 degrees C. Only 1.2% of available L-alanine was taken up during germination. Pretreatment of spores with glutaraldehyde did not interfere with L-alanine uptake at aldehyde concentrations up to 0.5% (w/v). However, this was significantly reduced at a glutaraldehyde concentration of 1.0% (w/v). Minimal differences were observed between acid and alkaline forms of the aldehyde. The results are discussed in terms of the mode of action of glutaraldehyde.  相似文献   

14.
S M Mutetwa  E R James 《Cryobiology》1984,21(5):552-558
Various cooling and warming rates were investigated to determine the optimum conditions for cryopreserving the intraerythrocytic stages of Plasmodium chabaudi. Infected blood, equilibrated in 10% v/v glycerol at 37 degrees C or in 15% v/v Me2SO at 0 degree C for 10 min, was cryopreserved using cooling rates between 1 and 5100 degrees C min-1. After overnight storage in liquid nitrogen the samples were warmed at 12,000 degrees C min-1. Warming rates between 1 and 12,000 degrees C min-1 were investigated using samples previously cooled at 3600 degrees C min-1. After thawing, the glycerol and Me2SO were removed by dilution in 15% v/v glucose-supplemented phosphate-buffered saline. Survival was assayed by inoculation of groups of five mice each with 10(6) infected cells and the time taken to reach a level of 2% parasitemia estimated. The optimum cooling rate was 3600 degrees C min-1 for parasites frozen using either 10% glycerol or 15% Me2SO; the pre-2% patent periods were 0.90 and 1.01 days above control values (representing survival levels of 21 and 17.5%, respectively). The optimum warming rate was 12,000 degrees C min-1; the pre-2% patent periods were 1.01 and 1.32 days above control values, respectively (18 and 10% survival), for glycerol and Me2SO. With ethanediol (5% v/v) and sucrose (15% w/v) as cryoprotectants the optimum warming rates were also 12,000 degrees C min-1 while the optimum cooling rates were 330 and 3600 degrees C min-1, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The interaction of glycerol concentrations of 0-10% and cooling rates from 1 to 1,500 degrees C/min with boar spermatozoa motility and acrosomal integrity (proportion of spermatozoa with normal apical ridge) was studied after thawing 0.5 ml straws at a constant rate. While increasing the glycerol concentration from 0 to 4% progressively improved motility, the percentage of spermatozoa with a normal apical ridge gradually decreased. The magnitudes of the respective changes depended on cooling rate. A peak value of 48.1% and rating 3.8 were obtained in semen protected with 4% glycerol, frozen at 30 degrees C/min. Increasing the glycerol levels above 6% resulted in a gradual decrease in motility. The proportion of spermatozoa with normal apical ridge was highest in semen protected with 0-1% glycerol after cooling at 30 degrees C/min (64.4% and 66.1%, respectively), but at these glycerol concentrations the percentage of motile spermatozoa was low. At the 30 degrees C/min cooling rate, the decline in the proportion of cells with normal apical ridge due to increasing the glycerol levels to 3 and 4% was relatively slow (57.3% and 49.4%, respectively). Cooling at 1 degrees C/min was detrimental to acrosomal integrity, which decreased with increasing glycerol concentration, in contrast to increasing motility, which even at its maximum, remained low. The direct plunging of straws into liquid nitrogen (1,500 degrees C/min) resulted in damaged acrosomes in all spermatozoa with the total loss of motility. Balancing motility and acrosomal integrity, freezing boar semen protected with 3% glycerol by cooling at 30 degrees C/min resulted in optimal survival for boar semen frozen in 0.5 ml French straws.  相似文献   

16.
The ability of mild hypothermia (MH; 34 degrees C) to protect against postischemic endothelial injury and decrease reactive oxygen species' (ROS) formation was studied using lucigenin and luminol enhanced chemiluminescence (CL). Lucigenin CL is largely specific for superoxide, while luminol reacts with many ROS. Isolated rat livers perfused under constant flow in a non-recirculating system were exposed to 2.5 h of ischemia after 0.5 h perfusion with Krebs-Henseleit buffer at either normothermia (38 degrees C) or mild hypothermia (34 degrees C) (n = 5, all groups). CL (cps), vascular resistance (Woods units), O2 consumption, and potassium efflux were measured at the end of perfusion, and at 0 min reperfusion, and every 30 min during reperfusion. For both the lucigenin and luminol groups, CL and vascular resistance increased significantly (repeat measures ANOVA, P <0.05) for normothermia (NT, 38 degrees C) but not mild hypothermia. Potassium efflux did not change significantly for the mild hypothermia groups. In the luminol enhanced group, oxygen consumption was greater in the mildly hypothermic group at 1 h and 1.5 h of reperfusion. Mild hypothermia decreased postischemic ROS production. Increased vascular resistance in the normothermia group may indicate an endothelial injury. Mild hypothermia appears to protect against this injury.  相似文献   

17.
Myocardial mean myoglobin oxygen saturation was determined spectroscopically from isolated guinea pig hearts perfused with red blood cells during increasing hypoxia. These experiments were undertaken to compare intracellular myoglobin oxygen saturation in isolated hearts perfused with a modest concentration of red blood cells (5% hematocrit) with intracellular myoglobin saturation previously reported from traditional buffer-perfused hearts. Studies were performed at 37 degrees C with hearts paced at 240 beats/min and a constant perfusion pressure of 80 cmH2O. It was found that during perfusion with a hematocrit of 5%, baseline mean myoglobin saturation was 93% compared with 72% during buffer perfusion. Mean myoglobin saturation, ventricular function, and oxygen consumption remained fairly constant for arterial perfusate oxygen tensions above 100 mmHg and then decreased precipitously below 100 mmHg. In contrast, mean myoglobin saturation, ventricular function, and oxygen consumption began to decrease even at high oxygen tension with buffer perfusion. The present results demonstrate that perfusion with 5% red blood cells in the perfusate increases the baseline mean myoglobin saturation and better preserves cardiac function at low oxygen tension relative to buffer perfusion. These results suggest that caution should be used in extrapolating intracellular oxygen dynamics from buffer-perfused to blood-perfused hearts.  相似文献   

18.
Experiments are described in which rabbit kidneys were perfused with solutions containing 2, 3, or 4 m glycerol and then were autografted in order to measure any functional impairment. The basic perfusate contained Haemaccel (17.5 g/litre) and mannitol (111 mm) and had a total osmolality of 400 mosmol/kg. The perfusion temperature was 10 °C. Glycerol concentration was slowly increased at a rate of 30 mm min?1 to 2, 3, or 4 m, was held at the maximum concentration for 30 min, and was then decreased to < 0.1 m at 30 mm min?1. An immediate contralateral nephrectomy was carried out, and the function of the perfused kidney was assessed by serial measurements of blood urea and serum creatinine, by the determination of 24-hr endogenous creatinine clearance at 1 month and by histological examination. It was found that a concentration of 3 m glycerol was readily tolerated.  相似文献   

19.
Rabbit kidneys were perfused with up to 4 M glycerol or propane-1,2-diol (propylene glycol, PG) in three vehicle solutions: one normokalemic and made hypertonic with mannitol (HP5), one hyperkalemic but without mannitol (HP6), and one hyperkalemic and with mannitol (HP7). Subsequent function was assessed by autotransplantation. Up to 3 M glycerol in HP5 was well tolerated but not in HP6 or HP7. Conversely, up to 3 M PG in HP7 was compatible with excellent post-transplant function, but the same concentration in HP5 was severely damaging. PG (4 M) in either solution was severely injurious and no kidneys survived perfusion with this concentration. Vascular resistance was well controlled by the vehicle solutions with mannitol, but it was generally higher during perfusion with the hyperkalemic HP7 compared with the normokalemic HP5. No kidneys perfused with 3 M solutions of either of the cryoprotective agents and cooled briefly to -6 degrees C without freezing had any post-transplant function, and neither did kidneys perfused with 3 M PG or 4 M glycerol tolerate slow cooling to -80 degrees C and warming. The need to optimize perfusate composition for the CPA being used is clear, and the dramatic increase in toxicity of PG when the concentration exceeds 3 M supports the suggestion that mixtures of PG and glycerol should be considered. The observation of damage at high subzero temperatures, before freezing has occurred, requires further detailed study.  相似文献   

20.
Rabbit kidneys were perfused at 10 °C with a solution containing gelatin polypeptides (Haemaccel), and glycerol was introduced, and then removed, using a technique that has previously been shown to result in viable kidneys. This involved increasing the concentration of glycerol in the perfusate from zero to a maximum of 3 , holding it at this level for 30 min, and then decreasing it at the same rate to < 0.1 . Measurements were made of the concentration of glycerol in cortex, cortico-medullary zone, and medulla at various stages of perfusion. During the experiments it was observed that vascular resistance increased dramatically toward the end of deglycerolization, and changes in regional perfusate flow were measured by the diffusable indicator method. It was found that renal tissue is effectively permeated by glycerol using this technique. The perfusate flow throughout all regions of the kidney was reduced during deglycerolization but the greatest effect was on cortico-medullary flow, which was found to be abnormally high during the initial stages of hypothermic perfusion, but was severely impaired when the glycerol was removed. The cryoprotectant was almost completely removed by the washout procedure adopted.  相似文献   

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