The ex vivo heart
perfusion model is a well-accepted preparation, introduced more than a century
ago. Nowadays, it is not so much used in the study of heart’s physiological
principles, but in supplying corresponding physiological evidence to underlying
molecular processes of ischemia, altered myocardial metabolism, new pharmaceutical
agents, etc.,. Although it was named after Oscar Langendorff who demonstrated
its use in the mammalian heart in 1895, the same model was well established by
Elias Cyon in the frog heart as early as 1866.
The chronological reference to
the origin of the method is important not only for historical reference
reasons, but also, and particularly so, for highlighting the tremendous efforts
of the early physiologists to develop suitable recording methods in parallel.
Although the continuous pressure monitoring was achieved quite early, almost
simultaneously with the genesis of the model, the morphometric assessment of the
beating heart, by means of volumetric changes, diastolic and systolic changes,
was not possible until much later, during Starling’s era. Read more.................
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