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REPERFUSION INJURY

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Title: REPERFUSION INJURY


1
REPERFUSION INJURY
  • Frank Nami, M.D.
  • Saint Barnabas Medical Center

2
Ischemia and Reperfusion
  • Ischemic tissue will ultimately progress to
    cellular death if restoration of blood flow does
    not occur in a timely manner.
  • Restoration of blood flow and oxygenation to
    ischemic tissues can result in a paradoxical
    enhancement of tissue injury.

3
Reperfusion Injury
  • Often more severe than damage incurred during the
    ischemic period itself.
  • Characterized by cellular edema, intracellular
    Ca2 overload with subsequent activation of Ca2-
    dependent autolytic enzymes, disruption of lipid
    membranes, and perturbations in mitochondrial
    structure and function.

4
Reperfusion Injury
  • Great relevance to the practice of surgery
  • Vascular Surgery
  • Cardiac Surgery
  • Transplant Surgery
  • Restoration of blood flow to the ischemic limb,
    heart or transplanted organ.

5
Mediators of Reperfusion Injury
  • Endothelial Cell
  • Oxygen Free Radicals
  • Polymorphonuclear Cells (PMNs)

6
Endothelial Cell
  • Thin monolayer of cells, resting on a basement
    membrane, surface area 5000 m2 but comprises
    only 1 of total body weight.
  • Exerts influence over blood vessel tone,
    permeability, cell adhesion, coagulation, and
    growth by regulating the production of a battery
    of molecules and cell surface proteins.

7
Endothelial Cell-Mediated Vasomotor Tone
  • Vasodilation - Prostacyclin (PGI2) via
    cyclooxygenase pathway, activates adenylate
    cyclase and protein kinase A, also inhibits
    platelet aggregation by increasing cAMP -
    promotes microcirculatory flow.

8
Endothelial Cell-Mediated Vasomotor Tone
  • Vasodilation - Nitric Oxide (NO) also inhibits
    platelet aggregation, decreases vascular smooth
    muscle cell proliferation. Produced from
    L-arginine and oxygen in endothelial cytosol.
  • Deficiency of NO synthesis reported in study of
    human volunteers with hypertension.

9
Endothelial Cell-Mediated Vasomotor Tone
  • Patients with diabetes, atherosclerosis,
    hypercholesterolemia, or cigarette smoking also
    exhibit deficient NO synthesis.
  • Adenosine - also a vasodilator, inhibits platelet
    and neutrophil aggregation.

10
Endothelial Cell-Mediated Vasomotor Tone
  • Vasoconstriction - Thromboxane A2 (TXA2) via
    thromboxane synthase, opposes prostacyclin and
    produces platelet adherence.
  • Endothelin-1, most potent vasoconstrictor known,
    counteracts NO.

11
Endothelial Cell-Mediated Cell Adhesion
  • Mediators formed during reperfusion induce
    endothelial cells to express intercellular
    adhesion molecules (ICAM 1 and 2), endothelial
    leukocyte adhesion molecule (ELAM) and selectins.
  • These receptors bind the CD11/CD18 complex on
    activated, facilitating PMN adherence to and
    migration across endothelium.

12
Endothelial Cell
  • Secretes an abundance of soluble factors which
    promote vasoconstriction, platelet aggregation,
    PMN plugging of capillaries, and increased
    vascular permeability.
  • Factors include Platelet aggregating factor
    (PAF), LTB4, TXA2 and endothelin.

13
Endothelial Cell
  • End result perfusion of the microcirculation is
    severely compromised, which manifests as the
    classic no-reflow phenomenon of reperfusion
    injury.

14
Oxygen Free Radicals
  • Three different molecules to be aware of
  • Superoxide anion O2-
  • Hydrogen peroxide H2O2
  • Hydroxyl radical .OH

15
Oxygen Free Radicals
  • Reperfusion stimulates xanthine oxidase which is
    activated in ischemic endothelial cells to
    generate superoxide radicals.
  • PMNs also generate oxygen free radicals.

16
Oxygen Free Radicals
  • These toxic moieties are rapidly generated at the
    onset of reperfusion and cause widespread damage
    to cellular macromolecules.
  • Peroxidation of lipid membranes, protein
    degradation, nucleic acid damage, cytochrome
    inactivation and neutralization of nitric oxide.

17
Oxygen Free Radicals
  • Most damaging effect is on lipid membranes,
    impairs normal fluidity and permeability of cell
    membranes leading to cellular edema, massive Ca2
    and Na overload and cell lysis.

18
Oxygen Free Radicals
  • Oxygen free radical scavengers and antioxidants
    have been shown both experimentally and
    clinically to ameliorate reperfusion injury.

19
Oxygen Free Radicals
  • Natural protective enzyme systems to reduce free
    radical damage include superoxide dismutase,
    catalase, and glutathione peroxidase.
  • Most important endogenous antioxidant is
    glutathione. N-acetylcysteine is an artificial
    glutathione precursor.

20
Activated PMNs
  • Inflict damage to reperfused endothelial and
    parenchymal cells.
  • Release a host of destructive proteolytic
    enzymes, including elastase, collagenase,
    gelatinase, lysozyme, and cathepsin G.

21
Activated PMNs
  • Source of oxygen free radicals by virtue of a
    superoxide generating NAD oxidase.
  • Produce hypochlorous acid by activity of
    myeloperoxidase.

22
Reduction of Reperfusion Injury
  • Allopurinol - inhibitor of xanthine oxidase has
    been shown to have protective effects.
  • Desferrioxamine - an iron chelator, removes an
    essential cofactor for the generation of hydroxyl
    radical.

23
Reduction of Reperfusion Injury
  • Vitamin E - prevents neutrophil accumulation and
    attenuates tissue damage in ischemic-reperfused
    human skeletal muscle.
  • N-acetylcysteine - pretreatment 30 minutes before
    infrarenal aortic clamping may help prevent
    reperfusion injury.

24
Ischemia, Reperfusion Injury and Compartment
Syndrome
  • Elevated pressure within a confined tissue space.
  • High energy injuries.
  • Pain out of proportion to injury.
  • Most commonly occurs in the leg.

25
Ischemia, Reperfusion Injury and Compartment
Syndrome
  • Four compartments in leg
  • Anterior anterior tibial artery, deep peroneal
    nerve, extensor muscles of toes and foot
  • Lateral superficial peroneal nerve, peroneal
    brevis and longis muscle

26
Ischemia, Reperfusion Injury and Compartment
Syndrome
  • Deep posterior tibial nerve, posterior tibial
    artery, peroneal artery, deep toe and foot flexor
    muscles
  • Superficial posterior superficial foot flexor
    muscles
  • Examining leg, document sensation at first web
    space (deep peroneal nerve), dorsum of foot
    (superficial peroneal nerve) and plantar surface
    of foot (tibial nerve)

27
Ischemia, Reperfusion Injury and Compartment
Syndrome
  • Pressure threshold at which fasciotomy is
    indicated has been debated.
  • 30-40 mm Hg
  • Can use arterial pressure transducer, IV tubing,
    3 way stopcock, 20 ml syringe, a 16Ga needle.
  • Four compartments should be measured
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