Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2984793 The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2006 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivePressure distention of veins during preparation for bypass surgery is believed to impair vascular integrity and reduce graft patency. We previously suggested a combination of pharmacologic vasodilatators as an alternative to distention. Vascular homeostasis is largely regulated by nitric oxide. We investigated the role of distention in comparison with pharmacologic vasorelaxation in the regulation of nitric oxide synthases, nitric oxide bioavailability, and vascular reactivity in vein grafts.MethodsIn a porcine model the internal jugular vein from either side received pressure distention or the combination of vasodilators (α-adrenergic antagonist, phenoxybenzamine, 10 μmol/L; Rho-kinase inhibitor, HA-1077 [fasudil], 50 μmol/L; calcium blocker, nicardipine, 1 μmol/L) and then was grafted into the carotid artery. Regulation of nitric oxide synthase, as well as nitrate and nitrite levels, were examined in vein grafts after 2 weeks of implantation.ResultsDistention of jugular veins resulted in reduction of vasoconstriction in response to depolarization and agonist stimulation. Arterial grafting doubled inducible nitric oxide synthase expression in both grafts but caused a pronounced upregulation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase protein (by 57.3% ± 5%) only in drug-treated grafts, whereas in distended grafts the endothelial nitric oxide synthase level was decreased by 27.5% ± 2.7%. The downregulated endothelial nitric oxide synthase level in the distended grafts was accompanied by a 45.2% ± 3.1% reduction of phospho–endothelial nitric oxide synthase Ser1177 levels and by a significant reduction in nitric oxide synthase activity (12.1% ± 1.2%) and nitrate production (48.9% ± 5.6%) in comparison with that seen in drug-treated grafts.ConclusionsPharmacologic preparation of the vein grafts results in upregulation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase and increased nitric oxide production in the vein grafts after arterial implantation. This might provide greater clinical benefit than conventional pressure-distention methods.

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