Scandinavian journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery
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Scand J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Jan 1981
Pulmonary oxygenation, central haemodynamics and glomerular filtration following cardiopulmonary bypass with colloid or non-colloid priming solution.
Plasma colloid osmotic pressure (COP), blood erythrocyte volume fraction (B-EVF), arterial oxygen tension at an inspired oxygen concentration of 30% (PaO2 (FIO2 0.3)), cardiac index, stroke volume, arterial mean pressure, left atrial mean pressure, pulmonary av-difference of oxygen (Ca-v O2) and creatinine clearance were studied in 16 patients during isolated aortic valve replacement. The patients were divided into two groups with different priming solutions in the oxygenator. In the non-colloid group 2,000 ml of Ringerdex was used, while the colloid group had 1,600 ml of Ringerdex and 400 ml of albumin 20% (80 g). ⋯ Cardiopulmonary bypass produced no changes in cardiac index, stroke volume, arterial mean pressure, left atrial mean pressure, Ca-v O2 or creatinine clearance in either of the groups. PaO2 (FIO2 0.3) remained unchanged in the non-colloid group and showed a small but significant reduction (p less than 0.01) in the colloid group. No positive effects of a colloid prime were demonstrated.
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Scand J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Jan 1981
Reduced lactate washout from the myocardium after combining St. Thomas I type cardioplegia with topical cooling of the heart. Myocardial oxygenation and performance after cardioplegia in coronary artery bypass grafting patients.
The myocardial oxygen extraction was diminished with a resulting coronary sinus blood oxygen saturation of 48 +/- 5 (SEM) %, as compared to the pre-bypass control level of 30 +/- 1%, two minutes after the ischaemic period in St. Thomas I type cardioplegia (CPL) with topical cooling of the heart during a coronary bypass operation. The myocardial oxygen extraction returned to prebypass levels after ten minutes of reperfusion following ischaemia and remained so after the bypass. ⋯ The greatest arterial-coronary sinus lactate difference in the IITC-group was -1.7 +/- 0.2 mmol/l and in the CPL-group -0.7 +/- 0.2 mmol/l. Cardiac performance (assessed by the CI-PCWP relationship) which was moderately depressed by the anaesthesia and surgery before bypass, returned gradually to the control level within 20 hours after operation. The present study shows that no apparent postischaemic abnormality in myocardial oxygen utilization develops when single dose cardioplegia, together with topical cooling of the heart, is used for myocardial protection, and that the accumulation of myocardial lactate during ischaemia is less during cardioplegia with topical cooling of the heart than during intermittent ischaemic with topical cooling for coronary artery bypass grafting operations.
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Scand J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Jan 1981
Use of the activated coagulation time in cardiac surgery. Effects on heparin-protamine dosages and bleeding.
A standard heparin-protamine protocol was used for a series of 44 patients. In a second series of 82 patients. Activated Clotting Time (ACT) by the Hemochron method was used to control heparinization and its reversal with protamine. ⋯ The intra-operative blood loss was on an average 50% less in group II than in group I (p less than 0.001). There was, however, no significant difference in regard to postoperative bleeding. The introduction of the ACT test thus resulted in reduced dosages of heparin and protamine and in a reduction of intra-operative bleeding, while surgical technique seems to be the main factor in the control of postoperative bleeding.
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Five hundred and eleven patients with penetrating or perforating chest injuries were admitted to the Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, University Central Hospital, Helsinki, during the 25-year-period 1952-77. There were 433 stab wounds, 59 gunshot wounds and 19 other penetrating injuries. The organs most often involved were lungs (major haemo- or pneumothorax in 385 patients), heart (63 patients) and liver (61 patients). ⋯ One of them had an aortopulmonary fistula and the other a traumatic VSD combined with aortic valve lesion. One of the traumatic VSDs closed spontaneously during the follow-up time. An active operative approach in the early phase seems to guarantee the best final results, especially in the most critically ill patients.
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Scand J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Jan 1981
Plasma colloid osmotic pressure during open-heart surgery using non-colloid or colloid priming solution in the extracorporeal circuit.
Two different priming solutions for the heart-lung machine were compared in 14 patients during aortic valve replacement. Colloid osmotic pressure (COP), and albumin in plasma, blood erythrocyte volume fraction (B-EVF) and arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) (FIO2 = 1.0) were followed before, during and after perfusion. The two priming solutions were 2,000 ml Ringerdex (7 patients) or 1,800 ml Ringerdex + 200 ml 20% albumin (7 patients). ⋯ There was a good correlation between COP and albumin measured in the same plasma samples (r = 0.83, p less than 0.001). At one hour after bypass PaO2 (FIO2 = 1.0) tended to decrease in the non-colloid group, compared with preperfusion level. 40 g of albumin was a too small amount of colloid to diminish substantially the reduction of COP during perfusion. The unchanged levels of COP and B-EVF during perfusion, despite further dilution as well as the parallel normalization after perfusion, can only be explained by loss of water from the circulation.