Increased myocardial methionine-enkephalin with reduced arterial oxygenation in congenital heart disease

Oliver van den Brink, Andrew Cochrane, Franklin Rosenfeldt, Daniel Penny, Salvatore Pepe

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5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Cardiac opioid peptides have been identified to exert important adaptive metabolic signalling for cardioprotection against ischaemia or hypoxia-related injury. Aims: To determine myocardial methionine-enkephalin content in children with hypoxemic congenital heart defects and to correlate myocardial content of methionine-enkephalin with the extent of arterial oxygen desaturation.

Methods: Children (n= 20, median age of 16 months), undergoing cardiac surgical repair (tetralogy of Fallot, 17/20), were included in this study. Arterial oxygen saturation was measured on admission. Myocardial samples obtained during surgery were assayed via radioimmunochemistry for methionine-enkephalin content.

Results: Greater methionine-enkephalin content was measured in the right ventricles of the patients suffering from recent cyanotic spells compared with those with no recent spells (cyanotic spells: 2418 ± 844 pg/g wet weight tissue, n= 6; no spells: 1175 ± 189 pg/g wet weight tissue, n= 14, P= 0.04). An inverse correlation was evident between the arterial oxygen saturation and myocardial methionine-enkephalin content.

Conclusion: Myocardial methionine-enkephalin levels increase with the severity of hypoxic stress in congenital cardiac disease and may play an important adaptive role in countering adrenergic over-activity and related excess demand on myocardial metabolic capacity.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E63-E67
Number of pages5
JournalJournal of Paediatrics and Child Health
Volume50
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

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