INVESTIGADORES
GONZALEZ German Esteban
artículos
Título:
Histopathologic time course of myocardial infarct in rabbit hearts
Autor/es:
MORALES C,; GONZÁLEZ GE,; RODRÍGUEZ JM,; MATOSO M,; BERTOLASI CA,; GELPI RJ
Revista:
CARDIOVASCULAR PATHOLOGY
Editorial:
ELSEVIER
Referencias:
Año: 2002 vol. 11 p. 318 - 324
ISSN:
1054-8807
Resumen:
Abstract Introduction: The histopathologic evolution of myocardial infarct and of remote zones in rabbit hearts was studied. Methods: The left coronary artery of 55 rabbits was ligated and rabbits were sacrificed at 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, 14, 16, 18, 26, 35 and 56 days post-ligature (n = 5 per group). Two rabbits were used as control and four were sham-operated. The hearts were excised, cut in slices and stained with hematoxylineosin, Masson’s trichrome and picrosirius red. The histological evaluation was semiquantitative (scale: 0 to ++). Results: At day 2, the presence of neutrophils was ++, decreasing suddenly at day 4 and disappearing completely at day 6. The proliferation of cells with features of fibroblasts increased from days 4 to 14 post-occlusion. Coagulation necrosis in mid-myocardium during the first week was ++. Subendocardial myocytolysis was evident from day 2 up to day 56 post-infarction. During the second week, proliferation of lymphocytes and macrophages (++), granulation tissue formation (++) and incipient traces of fibrosis that peaked at day 35 were observed. Scarring was complete at day 56 (++). In remote zones (right ventricle and septum), the proliferation of cells+ on Vimentin was observed at day 2, and perivascular, interstitial and endocardial fibrosis started to increase at day 6 and peaked at day 16. Conclusion: Although myocardial infarction in rabbits maintains the essence of the infarct chronology, some differences as the early presence of cells+ on Vimentin and subendocardial fibrosis in infarcted areas, and also the rapid increase and early disappearance of neutrophils appear when other species are considered. An interesting finding was the early proliferation of cells with features of fibroblasts in remote zones