Coronary Angiography During Ex-Situ Heart Perfusion in a Porcine Model.

J Vis Exp

Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Marie Lannelongue Hospital, Groupe Hospitalier Paris Saint Joseph; Laboratory of Preclinical Research, Department of Research and Innovation, Groupe Hospitalier Paris Saint Joseph; Inserm UMR S 999, Pulmonary Hypertension: Pathophysiology and Novel Therapies, Marie Lannelongue Hospital, Groupe Hospitalier Paris Saint Joseph; University of Paris Saclay;

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Heart transplantation is crucial for patients with advanced heart failure, but there's a shortage of donor organs, leading to the increased use of extended criteria donors (ECD).
  • Many ECDs at risk for coronary artery disease do not undergo standard coronary angiography, resulting in some hearts being declined or procured without proper screening.
  • The described protocol demonstrates a new method for performing coronary angiography during normothermic ex-situ heart perfusion (NESP), showing it to be reproducible without affecting heart viability and potentially improving ECD procurement rates.

Article Abstract

Heart transplantation is the gold standard treatment for advanced heart failure. The procurement of extended criteria donors (ECD) increases due to the current organ shortage. Coronary angiography is recommended in ECD at risk for coronary artery disease but is not systematically performed. These hearts are, therefore, either declined for transplant or procured without screening for coronary artery disease. Coronary angiography during normothermic ex-situ heart perfusion (NESP) could be an interesting approach to enhance the rate of ECD procurement and to reduce the risk of primary graft failure in the absence of coronary angiography in ECD. The present protocol aims to provide material details along with optimal imaging views for coronary angiography during NESP. Reproducible angiographic views were observed, including one dedicated to the right coronary artery, two for the left anterior descending artery, two for the circumflex artery, and a spider view. Continuous lactate extraction was observed in all procedures with a final median concentration of 1.10 mmol/L (0.61-1.75 mmol/L) two hours after coronary angiography, consistent with myocardial viability. The median contrast agent volume used for ex-situ imaging of the isolated perfused heart was 48 mL (38-108 mL). This protocol was reproducible for coronary artery imaging and did not impair myocardial viability during NESP.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/66567DOI Listing

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