European journal of cardio-thoracic surgery : official journal of the European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jan 1995
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialHaemodynamic and metabolic effects of surface rewarming after coronary revascularization.
Cardiac surgery is often associated with a postoperative increase in the patient's metabolic rate; surface rewarming has been suggested to decrease the energy expenditure by preventing hypothermia. Thirty patients, undergoing coronary revascularization, were randomly divided into two groups; after surgery group A was rewarmed by a new device that acts by both conduction and convection, while group B was just covered with cotton blankets. Blood, oesophagus and skin (thigh and foot) temperatures were recorded on admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) and 30, 60, 90, 180, 270, and 450 min later. ⋯ Group A was also characterized by lower cardiac indices and oxygen consumption. As the occurrence of a dependence of oxygen consumption on delivery could be reasonably ruled out in warmed patients because blood lactate levels were lower than in the controls, we conclude that surface rewarming might have some positive effect in decreasing metabolic demand after cardiac surgery even if the patient's core temperature is little affected. The inhibition of skin temperature receptors could possibly explain this finding.
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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jan 1995
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialSuppressed fibrinolysis after administration of low-dose aprotinin: reduced level of plasmin-alpha2-plasmin inhibitor complexes and postoperative blood loss.
Various clinical investigation have shown that aprotinin therapy reduces bleeding after open-heart operations. In this study low-dose aprotinin, 30,000 KIU/kg in the cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) priming volume and 7,500 KIU/kg intravenously each hour during CPB, was used in ten patients undergoing primary myocardial revascularization or surgery for valvular diseases. Another ten patients served as controls. ⋯ The levels of plasmin inhibitor were significantly reduced during CPB in the control group. The alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor-plasma complex levels, indicating the plasmin activity, were significantly reduced in the aprotinin group. These results confirmed that low-dose aprotinin reduced blood loss with the prevention of hyperfibrinolysis during CPB and demonstrated improved hemostasis.
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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jan 1995
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialIntravenous amiodarone vs propafenone for atrial fibrillation and flutter after cardiac operation.
The safety and efficacy of amiodarone and propafenone in converting atrial fibrillation or flutter after cardiac surgery were compared in a randomized double-blind trial. Eighty-four patients with sustained atrial tachyarrhythmias of more than 30 min' duration, stable hemodynamic status and neither preoperative atrial arrhythmias nor treatment with other antiarrhythmis drugs, were randomized to receive amiodarone (46 patients: 5 mg/kg over 15 min and then 15 mg/kg over the subsequent 24 h for non-converting) or propafenone (38 patients: 2 mg/kg over 15 in and then 10 mg/kg over the subsequent 24 h for non-converting). Nine of the 46 patients (19.5%) receiving amiodarone converted to sinus rhythm within 1 h following bolus injection compared with 17 of 38 patients (44.7%) treated with propafenone (P < 0.05). ⋯ A significantly progressive reduction in ventricular response, already evident at 10th min from the start of treatment, was achieved in both groups of patients. Side effects occurred in six patients given propafenone (15.7%) and in five given amiodarone (10.8%) (P = NS). The two drugs were equally effective in converting postoperative atrial fibrillation and/or flutter after 24 h although propafenone was superior within the first hour.