Sustained therapeutic perfusion outside transplanted sites in chronic myocardial infarction after stem cell transplantation

The international journal of cardiovascular imaging(2013)

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Abstract
This study aimed at comparing long-term variations in the perfusion of chronic myocardial infarction (MI) areas after local injections of autologous bone marrow stem cells (BMSCs). 14 coronary ligated rats with transmural chronic MI (4 months) were used: a control group (n = 7) versus a treated group (n = 7) in which 111 In labeled-BMSCs were directly engrafted on MI areas. By using 111 In/ 99m Tc SPECT and Sestamibi gated-SPECT,. left ventricle perfusion and function were monitored in all animals by serial 99m Tc-Sestamibi pinhole gated-SPECT over a period of 6 months. Post-therapeutic myocardial perfusion improved as early as 48 h following injection in the 2 groups. This benefice was sustained during the 6-month follow-up in the non-engrafted MI-areas from treated rats (at 6-months: +10 ± 5 %), whereas the engrafted ones, as well as the MI areas from control rats, exhibited progressive deterioration over time (at 6-months: −9 ± 10 % and −5 ± 3 %, respectively). Perfusion enhancement of the chronic MI areas treated by BMSCs transplantation is: (1) marked in the following days, presumably because of an unspecific inflammatory reaction, and (2) sustained over the long term but only outside the sites of cell engraftment, suggesting a distant paracrine effect of transplanted cells.
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Key words
Myocardial infarction,Rats,Cell therapy,Sestamibi,111In-oxine,SPECT
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