Scandinavian journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery
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Scand J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Jan 1979
Fresh autologous blood in open-heart surgery. Influence on blood requirements, bleeding and platelet counts.
The role of fresh autologous blood on haemostasis was studied in 30 patients undergoing aortic valve replacement. All the patients were extremely haemodiluted during the perfusion by using a non-haemic priming solution and withdrawal of 15% of the blood volume at the start of operation. In half of the patients, the autologous blood was retransfused immediately after the termination of perfusion. ⋯ Significantly less donor blood and plasma was transfused in the patients receiving early transfusion of autologous blood. An average reduction of 36% donor blood and 45% plasma was obtained. The blood losses were also less in these patients, but the differences were not significant.
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Scand J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Jan 1979
Postpericardiotomy syndrome diagnosed by echocardiography.
In order to evaluate the present incidence of post-pericardiotomy syndrome (PPS) and the reliability of conventional diagnostic methods in its detection, 194 consecutive patients were studied by echocardiography one month after cardiac surgery and thereafter every third month up to one year, and also during hospitalization if symptoms or signs of PPS appeared. PPS was diagnosed on the basis of pericardial effusion demonstrated by echocardiography and was found in 15 patients (8%) 7-142 days (mean 44 days) after operation. ⋯ Hence in 40% of the patients echocardiography was the only way to make correct diagnosis. In the investigation of a patient with chest pain and/or fever after cardiac surgery, echocardiography seems very useful since the conventional electrocardiogram and the chest X-ray are often unreliable because of the changes caused by the cardiac surgery per se.