| Literature DB >> 15920225 |
Ramiro Arellano1, Bing Siang Gan, Mary Jane Salpeter, Erik Yeo, Stuart McCluskey, Ruxandra Pinto, Jonathan Irish, Douglas C Ross, D John Doyle, John Parkin, Dale Brown, Lorne Rotstein, Ian Witterick, Wayne Matthews, John Yoo, Peter C Neligan, Pat Gullane, Howard Lampe.
Abstract
In Canada, hydroxyethyl starch 264/0.45 (HES 264/0.45; molar weight 264 kDa, molar substitution 0.45) has largely replaced albumin as the colloidal fluid of choice for perioperative intravascular volume expansion. The maximum recommended dose of HES 264/0.45 is 28 mL/kg; however, there are no clinical data supporting this limit. In this study we compared the hemostatic effects of HES 264/0.45 versus 5% albumin in doses up to 45 mL/kg over 24 h during major reconstructive head and neck surgery. Fifty patients were randomized to receive HES 264/0.45 or 5% human albumin from the induction of anesthesia until 24 h thereafter. Both albumin and HES 264/0.45 effectively maintained physiologic variables in the perioperative and postoperative periods. The partial thromboplastin time and international normalized ratio were significantly increased in the HES 264/0.45 group compared with the albumin group after infusion of 30 mL/kg and 45 mL/kg (P < 0.05). Factor VIII activity and von Willebrand factor level were significantly reduced in the HES 264/0.45 group compared with the albumin group after infusion of 15 mL/kg, 30 mL/kg, and 45 mL/kg (P < 0.05). Significantly more subjects in the HES 264/0.45 group received allogeneic red blood cell transfusions (P < 0.02). We conclude that HES 264/0.45 infusions >30 mL/kg over 24 h impair coagulation to a greater extent than albumin, possibly leading to more allogeneic transfusions.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15920225 DOI: 10.1213/01.ANE.0000152008.04333.53
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anesth Analg ISSN: 0003-2999 Impact factor: 5.108