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conferenceseries
.com
March 22-23, 2017 | Rome, Italy
2
nd
World Congress on
Public Health & Nutrition
Volume 7, Issue 1 (Suppl)
J Community Med Health Educ 2017
ISSN: 2161-0711, JCMHE an open access journal
Public Health 2017
March 22-23, 2017
EFFECTS OF BARIATRIC SURGERY ON MYOCARDIAL RESISTANCE TO ISCHEMIA AND
REPERFUSION INJURY IN THE EXPERIMENT
Galina V Semikova
a
, Oleg V Kornyushin
b
, Elena E Davydova
a
, Lucas G Carelli
a
, Alexander E Neumark
b
, Oxana Tkachuk
a
, Alexander S Polozov
c
and
Iana G
Toropova
b
a
First Pavlov State Medical University of St. Petersburg, Russia
b
Federal Almazov North-West Medical Research Centre, Russia
c
Pavlov Institute of Physiology, RAS, Russia
Statement of the Problem:
Obesity, metabolic syndrome and diabetes mellitus type 2 are the most common pathological states in
the world. Although bariatric surgery is widely used to reduce the adverse effects, caused by these states, its effects on cardiovascular
system remain in question. To solve this problem, studies in animals are needed to evaluate the effects of various bariatric procedures
on hemodynamic in normal and pathological states. The aim of this study is to compare in experiments on rats the impact of various
bariatric procedures on myocardial resistance to ischemia and reperfusion injury.
Methodology &Theoretical Orientation:
The rats were subjected to the surgeries for proximal stomach resection, ileal interposition
and laparotomy. 5-6 Months after the surgeries, isolated hearts of the animals were perfused by Crebs-Henseleit solution in vitro
according to Langendorff. Coronary flow, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, heart rate and contractile function were measured
before ischemia period and during perfusion period. To identify areas of necrosis following ischemia, the hearts were incubated with
2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride. The necrosis area was evaluated on digital photographs by manually contouring the differentially
colored left ventricle subsets.
Findings:
5-6 Months after the surgeries, the proximal gastrectomy, but not the ileal interposition, contributed to the increase of
necrosis area in the heart after ischemia. Specific changes in the dynamics of coronary flow, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, heart
rate and contractile function during perfusion period were observed after the proximal stomach resection and the ileal interposition.
Conclusion & Significance:
In normal conditions, the effects of bariatric procedures on myocardial resistance to ischemia and
reperfusion injury depend on the type of surgery. The data obtained are important to assess the impact of different bariatric procedures
on cardiovascular system and to develop the effective surgical approaches for the treatment of Type II diabetes in patients with heart
disease.
Biography
Galina Semikova graduated in 2015 from the First Pavlov State Medical University of Saint Petersburg, Russia, with the specialization in endocrinology. Area
of interests is metabolic syndrome, obesity, cardiovascular diseases, cardioprotection, system of incretins, bariatric surgery. She actively uses as pathological
conditions experimental approaches to ischemia and reperfusion on
in vivo
and
ex vivo
models, on the isolated heart and has experience in the evaluation of
cardioprotective effects of gastrointestinal peptides. In addition, in the course of training in the Laboratory of Nutrition Physiology in Pavlov Institute of Physiology,
RAS, she got experience in the use of the method for assessing intestinal glucose absorption ability
in vivo
(in the absence of anesthesia and surgical trauma).
semikovagv@yandex.ruGalina V Semikova et al., J Community Med Health Educ 2017, 7:1 (Suppl)
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2161-0711.C1.025