Literature DB >> 20736244

Should blood flow during cardiopulmonary bypass be individualized more than to body surface area?

S A Thomassen1, A Larsson, J J Andreasen, W Bundgaard, M Boegsted, B S Rasmussen.   

Abstract

Blood flow during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is calculated on body surface area (BSA). Increasing comorbidity, age and weight of today's cardiac patients question this calculation as it may not reflect individual metabolic requirement. The hypothesis was that a measured cardiac index (CI) prior to normothermic CPB is a better estimate. A cross-over study, with random allocation to CPB blood flow for 20 minutes based on either a calculation (2.4 L/min/m(2)) or on CI, with a switch to the opposite flow for another 20 minutes, was performed. Twenty-two elective cardiac surgery patients with normal ventricular function were included. Effect parameters were cerebral oxygenation, mixed venous saturation and arterial lactate. CI varied from 1.9 to 3.1 L/min/m(2) (median 2.4 L/min/m(2)). No differences in effect parameters were seen. In conclusion, a CPB blood flow based on an individual estimate did not improve cerebral and systemic oxygenation compared to a blood flow based on BSA.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20736244     DOI: 10.1177/0267659110382062

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Perfusion        ISSN: 0267-6591            Impact factor:   1.972


  1 in total

1.  Emergent cardiopulmonary bypass for a 180 kilogram patient: support with a single oxygenator.

Authors:  Kyler T Hunter; Angela R Lopez; Kwok L Yun
Journal:  J Extra Corpor Technol       Date:  2013-09
  1 in total

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