Journal of cardiothoracic and vascular anesthesia
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J. Cardiothorac. Vasc. Anesth. · Aug 1992
The effect of the extended (3-year) anesthesia curriculum on anesthesia subspecialty education.
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of lengthening the anesthesia residency by the American Board of Anesthesiology on the education of anesthesia subspecialists. A survey of anesthesia residency programs was conducted from 1987 to 1991. The most frequent subspecialty practice in the clinical anesthesia (CA) 3 year is cardiovascular anesthesia. ⋯ For example, the percentage of CA3 residents spending 12 months in subspecialty education has decreased 83%. There appears to be a slight increase in the number of CA4 or PGY5 residents (fellows) electing subspecialty practice. It is concluded that the 3-year curriculum has produced a negative impact on the education of anesthesia subspecialists.
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J. Cardiothorac. Vasc. Anesth. · Aug 1992
The relationship among bronchial blocker cuff inflation volume, proximal airway pressure, and seal of the bronchial blocker cuff.
The resting volume and diameter of the bronchial blocker cuff (defined as inflation of the cuff to just its natural shape) of the Univent (Fuji Systems Corp, Tokyo, Japan) tube are 2 mL and 5 mm. However, much larger inflation volumes may be required to seal an adult mainstem bronchus and the surface area of contact between the resultant spherical or ellipsoid-shaped cuff and the wall of the mainstem bronchus may be small and susceptible to leak with the application of high proximal airway pressures. This experiment determined the relationship among airway diameter, proximal airway pressure, inflation volume of the bronchial blocker cuff, and leakage of air around the bronchial blocker cuff in an in vitro model. ⋯ The space between the tracheal cuff and the bronchial blocker cuff was then progressively pressurized in either a static or pulsed manner. The very distal end of the bronchus was functionally submerged under a beaker of water so that a bronchial blocker cuff leak would be indicated by bubbling. It was found that the Univent bronchial blocker cuff sealed the 12.8- and 16.0-mm ID mainstem bronchi against airway pressures as great as 100 cmH2O, with inflation volumes that were within the manufacturer's recommendation of 6 to 7 mL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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J. Cardiothorac. Vasc. Anesth. · Aug 1992
Anesthesia for bilateral lung transplantation without cardiopulmonary bypass: initial experience and review of intraoperative problems.
Bilateral lung transplantation (BLT) is a recently described procedure based on two sequential single-lung transplantations (SLT), which are performed by a transverse sternobithoracotomy. It does not require either cardiac arrest or routine use of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). The intraoperative management of 10 patients suffering from end-stage pulmonary disease is reported. ⋯ With chest closure, PVR returned to nearly normal values (range, 57-293, mean 167 dynes.s.cm-5) and Qva/Qt increased (range, 3 to 36, mean 20%). This limited series demonstrates that CPB is optional during this procedure. Good selection of recipients and donors, good lung preservation methods, and a short duration of cold ischemia are essential to success.
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J. Cardiothorac. Vasc. Anesth. · Aug 1992
Resident clinical competence in cardiac anesthesia: a case performance-based evaluation study.
The purpose of this study was to estimate the minimum number of cases that anesthesiology residents need to complete in order to master the clinical skills required in cardiac anesthesia. In addition, the extent to which the resident's general anesthesia experience and in-training examination scores influence clinical performance was also studied. The data presented were based on observation of 99 actual cases, which were managed by 16 residents. ⋯ The minimum number of cardiac cases that residents needed to manage before achieving a satisfactory level of skill ranged from about 10 cases for preoperative assessment to 20 to 30 cases for hemodynamic and coagulation management. It is concluded that residents needed different lengths of time to develop different skills, and it is logical to look at each basic skill independently in the evaluation of resident progress. Based on the findings of this study, it is suggested that a case performance-based evaluation approach might provide a more objective and accurate means for assessing resident progress in cardiac anesthesia.
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J. Cardiothorac. Vasc. Anesth. · Jun 1992
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialReduction in blood loss and blood use after cardiopulmonary bypass with high-dose aprotinin versus autologous fresh whole blood transfusion.
Ninety patients undergoing cardiac surgery were randomly divided into three groups of 30 patients to compare the effects on bleeding and transfusion requirements of either intraoperative infusion of high-dose aprotinin (GpI) or reinfusion of autologous fresh whole blood (GpII) versus a control group (GpIII). Standardized anesthetic, perfusion, and surgical techniques were used. Platelet counts, hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, fibrinogen, and Ivy-Nelson bleeding times determined at fixed times perioperatively did not differ among the three groups. ⋯ No GpI patient required transfusion of platelets or fresh frozen plasma. Fresh whole autologous blood transfusions had no significant hemostatic effect and failed to reduce the homologous blood requirement. Conversely, high-dose aprotinin reduced blood loss and transfusion requirements.