The response of rat and guinea-pig hearts to ischemia and reperfusion has been studied in identical conditions. Total 15-min ischemia of isolated rat hearts at 36 degrees C induced an almost 3-fold rise in isovolumic left ventricular diastolic pressure as well as a fall in the developed pressure and heart rate. Guinea-pig hearts, in the same conditions, exhibited a more steep fall in heart rate, with no rise in diastolic pressure. With constant heart rate produced by electrical stimulation at 4 Hz, the difference between two groups remained unchanged, while a more rapid fall in developed pressure in guinea-pig hearts coincided with a more profound fall in extracellular pH and almost a 2-fold rise in extracellular K+ activity. Rapid elimination of K+ and H+ at the early stages of reperfusion was followed by fibrillation in the majority of guinea-pig hearts, while no fibrillation was observed in rat hearts.

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