OBJECTIVE:Renal failure after bypass is still a threatening problem prolonging hospital care and reducing overall survival. The following pilot study was aimed to analyze whether perioperative low-dose prostacyclin infusion is able to preserve renal function in a selected group of patients who according to a poor cardiac function were stratified as high risk for the development of renal failure after bypass. DESIGN: Prospective randomized study. SETTING:Tertiary care university medical center. PATIENTS: Thirty-four patients scheduled for primary cardiac bypass surgery were included in the study (prostacyclin n = 17, control n = 17). Inclusion criteria were normal renal function before surgery and a cardiac ejection fraction <40%. INTERVENTIONS:Low-dose prostacyclin (2 ng/kg/min) was added to the standard anesthetic protocol. Infusion was started immediately before surgery and was continued for a maximum of 48 MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Significant differences in the endogenous creatinine clearance were found between the prostacyclin and the control group. Whereas there was a significant drop in the creatinine clearance at 6 hrs after surgery in the control group with a prolonged recovery period, values in the prostacyclin group remained stable. Creatinine clearance before intervention was 100 +/- 22 mL/min in the control group and 91 +/- 22 mL/min in the prostacyclin group, values at 24 hr were 68 +/- 34 mL/min vs. 103 +/- 37 mL/min, respectively (p < .01). Significant findings in favor for the prostacyclin group were also found for urine output and the fractional excretion rate of sodium. CONCLUSION: This first pilot study indicates that low-dose prostacyclin may be of substantial value for preserving renal function in high-risk patients after coronary bypass surgery.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE:Renal failure after bypass is still a threatening problem prolonging hospital care and reducing overall survival. The following pilot study was aimed to analyze whether perioperative low-dose prostacyclin infusion is able to preserve renal function in a selected group of patients who according to a poor cardiac function were stratified as high risk for the development of renal failure after bypass. DESIGN: Prospective randomized study. SETTING: Tertiary care university medical center. PATIENTS: Thirty-four patients scheduled for primary cardiac bypass surgery were included in the study (prostacyclin n = 17, control n = 17). Inclusion criteria were normal renal function before surgery and a cardiac ejection fraction <40%. INTERVENTIONS: Low-dose prostacyclin (2 ng/kg/min) was added to the standard anesthetic protocol. Infusion was started immediately before surgery and was continued for a maximum of 48 MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Significant differences in the endogenous creatinine clearance were found between the prostacyclin and the control group. Whereas there was a significant drop in the creatinine clearance at 6 hrs after surgery in the control group with a prolonged recovery period, values in the prostacyclin group remained stable. Creatinine clearance before intervention was 100 +/- 22 mL/min in the control group and 91 +/- 22 mL/min in the prostacyclin group, values at 24 hr were 68 +/- 34 mL/min vs. 103 +/- 37 mL/min, respectively (p < .01). Significant findings in favor for the prostacyclin group were also found for urine output and the fractional excretion rate of sodium. CONCLUSION: This first pilot study indicates that low-dose prostacyclin may be of substantial value for preserving renal function in high-risk patients after coronary bypass surgery.
Authors: K Spargias; E Adreanides; G Giamouzis; S Karagiannis; A Gouziouta; A Manginas; V Voudris; G Pavlides; D V Cokkinos Journal: Eur J Clin Pharmacol Date: 2006-07-11 Impact factor: 2.953
Authors: Meyeon Park; Steven G Coca; Sagar U Nigwekar; Amit X Garg; Susan Garwood; Chirag R Parikh Journal: Am J Nephrol Date: 2010-04-06 Impact factor: 3.754
Authors: Joachim Boldt; Thorsten Brenner; Andreas Lehmann; Johannes Lang; Bernhard Kumle; Christiane Werling Journal: Intensive Care Med Date: 2003-03-29 Impact factor: 17.440
Authors: Mathew Zacharias; Mohan Mugawar; G Peter Herbison; Robert J Walker; Karen Hovhannisyan; Pal Sivalingam; Niamh P Conlon Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2013-09-11