Vol. 282, Issue 4, H1359-H1369, April 2002
Effects of gestational age on myocardial blood flow and
coronary flow reserve in pressure-loaded ovine fetal hearts
Gregory B.
Dalshaug1,
Thomas D.
Scholz2,
Oliva M.
Smith2,
Kurt A.
Bedell2,
Christopher A.
Caldarone1, and
Jeffrey L.
Segar2
1 Department of Surgery and 2 Department of
Pediatrics and the Cardiovascular Center, University of Iowa, Iowa
City, Iowa 52242
To test the hypothesis
that coronary flow and coronary flow reserve are developmentally
regulated, we used fluorescent microspheres to investigate the effects
of acute (6 h) pulmonary artery banding (PAB) on baseline and
adenosine-enhanced right (RV) and left ventricular (LV) blood flow in
two groups of twin ovine fetuses (100 and 128 days of gestation, term
145 days, n = 6 fetuses/group). Within each group, one
fetus underwent PAB to constrict the main pulmonary artery diameter by
50%, and the other twin served as a nonbanded control. Physiological
measurements were made 6 h after the surgery was completed;
tissues were then harvested for analysis of selected genes that may be
involved in the early phase of coronary vascular remodeling. Within
each age group, arterial blood gas values, heart rate, and mean
arterial blood pressure were similar between control and PAB fetuses.
Baseline endocardial blood flow in both ventricles was greater in 100 than 128-day fetuses (RV: 341 ± 20 vs. 230 ± 17 ml · min
1 · 100 g
1; LV:
258 ± 18 vs. 172 ± 23 ml · min
1 · 100 g
1, both
P < 0.05). In both age groups, RV and LV endocardial
blood flows increased significantly in control animals during adenosine infusion and were greater in PAB compared with control fetuses. After
PAB, adenosine further increased RV blood flow in 128-day fetuses (from
416 ± 30 to 598 ± 33 ml · min
1 · 100 g
1,
P < 0.05) but did not enhance blood flow in 100-day
animals (490 ± 59 to 545 ± 42 ml · min
1 · 100 g
1,
P > 0.2). RV vascular endothelial growth factor and
Flk-1 mRNA levels were increased relative to controls
(P < 0.05) in 128 but not 100-day PAB fetuses. We
conclude that in the ovine fetus, developmentally related differences
exist in 1) baseline myocardial blood flows,
2) the adaptive response of myocardial blood flow to acute
systolic pressure load, and 3) the responses of selected genes involved in vasculogenesis to increased load in the fetal myocardium.
hypertrophy; vascular endothelial growth factor; angiogenesis