Ischemic preconditioning

Ischemic preconditioning
MeSHD019194

Ischemic preconditioning (IPC) is an experimental technique[1] for producing resistance to the loss of blood supply, and thus oxygen, to tissues of many types. In the heart, IPC is an intrinsic process whereby repeated short episodes of ischaemia protect the myocardium against a subsequent ischaemic insult. It was first identified in 1986 by Murry et al. This group exposed anesthetised open-chest dogs to four periods of 5 minute coronary artery occlusions followed by a 5-minute period of reperfusion before the onset of a 40-minute sustained occlusion of the coronary artery. The control animals had no such period of “ischaemic preconditioning” and had much larger infarct sizes compared with the dogs that did.[2] The exact molecular pathways behind this phenomenon have yet to be fully understood.

  1. ^ Murry, C. E.; Jennings, R. B.; Reimer, K. A. (1986-11-01). "Preconditioning with ischemia: a delay of lethal cell injury in ischemic myocardium". Circulation. 74 (5): 1124–1136. doi:10.1161/01.CIR.74.5.1124. ISSN 0009-7322. PMID 3769170.
  2. ^ Murry, CE; Jennings, RB; Reimer, KA (November 1986). "Preconditioning with ischemia: a delay of lethal cell injury in ischemic myocardium". Circulation. 74 (5): 1124–36. doi:10.1161/01.cir.74.5.1124. PMID 3769170.