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This study was designed to see if ischemic postconditioning could attenuate ischemic reperfusion injury of transplanted lungs recovered from non-heart-beating donors. Forty Sprague-Dawley rats were randomized into 2 groups: the control group and the ischemic postconditioning group, with 10 donor rats paired with 10 recipient rats in each group. Twenty rats underwent a left lung transplant from non-heart-beating donors with a warm ischemia time of 36.7 ± 5.62 minutes. In the ischemic postconditioning group, 5 cycles of 1-minute reperfusion and 1-minute reocclusion at the onset of reperfusion were applied as postconditioning. Arterial blood gas, wet-to-dry lung weight ratio, activities of malondialdehyde and superoxide dismutase, and expressions of apoptosis and ICAM-1 mRNA were compared. When compared with the control group 4 hours after reperfusion, PaO2 was higher, and wet-to-dry lung weight ratio was lower, in the ischemic postconditioning group, and expression of apoptosis and ICAM-1 mRNA as well as activity of malondialdehyde were lower, while superoxide dismutase activity was higher in the ischemic postconditioning group. Ischemic postconditioning can reduce ischemic reperfusion injury of lungs recovered from non-heart-beating donors and preserve lung function by reducing reactive oxygen species and inhibiting apoptosis and inflammation.

Citation

Qing-hua Hu, Fan-yan Luo, Wan-jun Luo, Lin Wang. Ischemic postconditioning reduces ischemic reperfusion injury of non-heart-beating donor grafts in a rat lung transplant. Experimental and clinical transplantation : official journal of the Middle East Society for Organ Transplantation. 2013 Feb;11(1):44-9

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PMID: 23387541

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