ASAIO journal : a peer-reviewed journal of the American Society for Artificial Internal Organs
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Proinflammatory cytokines have been implicated in mediating tissue injury after cardiopulmonary bypass. Causative factors of inflammatory response after cardiopulmonary bypass include contact of the blood with the extracorporeal circuit and heart-lung reperfusion injury when discontinuing bypass. To evaluate proinflammatory cytokine release during cardiopulmonary bypass, plasma levels of interleukin-6, 8, and monocyte chemoattractant factor were measured in the radial artery (for systemic blood) and left atrium before and after cardiopulmonary bypass. ⋯ These changes may have been caused by removal of the aortic cross clamp and recommencement of artificial ventilation, which result in reperfusion of the pulmonary capillary beds. There were no differences in cytokine levels after cardiopulmonary bypass in the radial artery and left atrium. This result suggested that lung reperfusion injury after cardiopulmonary bypass may not be the major causative factor of the release of proinflammatory cytokines.
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Uncontrollable hemorrhage accounts for a large proportion of total mortality in both civilian (31%) and military (47%) trauma victims. Hypothermia is a relatively safe method that could provide total body protection during hypovolemic shock and facilitate surgical intervention as a potentially life-saving procedure. This study tested the hypothesis that profound hypothermia and complete blood replacement in an established canine model, would facilitate resuscitative therapy from exsanguinating hypovolemic shock. ⋯ During rewarming the animals were autotransfused, weaned from the pump, and allowed to recover. All dogs (n = 8) survived, all but one with complete neurologic recovery: blood chemistry samples examined immediately after the procedure showed significant differences (p < 0.05) in only a few parameters, including creatine kinase (CK-BB and CK-MB), compared with the previous group of control dogs. The consistent survival of dogs showing apparently normal neurologic, physiologic, and biochemical recovery supports the concept that profound hypothermia using a protective hypothermic blood substitute could provide time for therapeutic resuscitation of currently intractable trauma cases.
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To overcome problems derived from the shaft within conventional centrifugal pumps, we have developed a new centrifugal pump, the magnetically suspended centrifugal pump (MSCP), which has no shaft and operates as a bearingless centrifugal pump. The impeller is suspended freely and centrally by magnetic force within the pump. Hemolysis tests were performed in comparison with the Biopump. ⋯ In the other sheep, the MSCP ran for 15 days, and showed no thrombus on the impeller. During each experiment, plasma free hemoglobin levels were less than 15 mg/dl. The MSCP induced less hemolysis than did the Biopump, and the MSCP containing an impeller coated with silicone demonstrated the potential to run for 14 days without thrombus formation within the pump.
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Recent experimental studies have suggested that the initial nonstimulated stage of dynamic cardiomyoplasty acutely impairs ventricular function. Those investigations were performed on normal hearts and primarily examined diastolic alterations as a result of the passive muscle wrap. The purpose of this study was to assess the acute systolic and diastolic effects of a nonstimulated muscle wrap in chronic heart failure induced by rapid ventricular pacing in canines. ⋯ By the end of the pacing period and before wrap, left ventricular dysfunction developed in all dogs, manifested by significant deterioration of both systolic and diastolic indices of ventricular function, as well as progressive increases in left ventricular volumes. However, no further deterioration with load insensitive indices of systolic or diastolic indicators of ventricular function was found as a result of the passive muscle wrap. These results suggest that the cardiomyoplasty procedure can be safely performed on failing hearts without prohibitive acute impairment of ventricular function.
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Advances in medical science and, in particular, minimally invasive surgical and diagnostic procedures have stimulated the development of new and improved medical devices. This has been made possible because of developments in engineering and material sciences. The design of devices for reusability is particularly important in an effort to provide cost effective healthcare. ⋯ The user needs to balance cost versus convenience and reprocessing requirements for reusables. Current trends are to reuse more devices, including many of which were meant to be disposable. Cost effective designs can best be achieved when the user and manufacturer work together on the design.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)