Literature DB >> 2241379

Facile retrograde cardioplegia: transatrial cannulation of the coronary sinus.

S R Gundry1, A Sequiera, A M Razzouk, J S McLaughlin, L L Bailey.   

Abstract

The benefits of coronary sinus (CS) cardioplegia are well known, yet CS cardioplegia is not used widely owing to the need for bicaval cannulation, snares, and an atriotomy. We designed and used in 225 consecutive patients a catheter containing a flexible removable stylet that, when shaped into a hockey-stick configuration, enabled blind intubation of the CS through a small pursestring in the right atrium, guided easily into the CS using a finger on the atrioventricular groove at the inferior vena cava. The CS was intubated in all patients; a pressure-limited balloon at the catheter tip was inflated after cross-clamping. An integral distal pressure line measured CS pressure. Catheters were placed distally within the great cardiac vein beyond the posterior interventricular vein; the position did not alter cooling: right ventricular free wall, septum, and left ventricular free wall temperatures were 7 degrees +/- 2 degrees, 8 degrees +/- 2 degrees, and 7 degrees +/- 2 degrees C, respectively, after an initial 10 mL/kg of blood cardioplegia. Transatrial CS cardioplegia was used in 45 aortic valve replacements, 22 mitral valve replacements, 4 triple-valve replacements, 6 congenital lesions, and 148 coronary revascularizations, including 40 redo operations. Atheromatous material was routinely flushed retrogradely from cut old vein grafts during revascularization; 70 revascularizations (47%) were performed urgently for acute infarction or jeopardized myocardium. No heart block or CS injury occurred, and inotrope use dropped to 10% of patients (from 38% in the previous 256 patients with antegrade blood cardioplegia). We conclude that the CS can be cannulated transatrially and that CS cardioplegia is more facile than antegrade cardioplegia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2241379     DOI: 10.1016/0003-4975(90)91112-o

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg        ISSN: 0003-4975            Impact factor:   4.330


  4 in total

1.  Comparison of antegrade with antegrade/retrograde cold blood cardioplegia for myocardial revascularization.

Authors:  A C Cernaianu; D R Flum; M Maurer; J H Cilley; M A Grosso; L Browstein; A J DelRossi
Journal:  Tex Heart Inst J       Date:  1996

2.  Retrograde coronary sinus cardioplegia cannula placement under short-time circulatory arrest in surgery for a ruptured type A dissection with a previous coronary artery bypass.

Authors:  Tomonobu Abe; Toshimichi Nonaka; Takafumi Terada; Rei Noda; Yuki Hatano; Noriyuki Kato; Miwako Kado; Hajime Sakurai
Journal:  Gen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2011-03-30

3.  Changes in myocardial lactate, pyruvate and lactate-pyruvate ratio during cardiopulmonary bypass for elective adult cardiac surgery: Early indicator of morbidity.

Authors:  Pm Kapoor; B Mandal; Uk Chowdhury; Sp Singh; U Kiran
Journal:  J Anaesthesiol Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2011-04

4.  Analysis of myocardial temperature changes in conventional isolated coronary artery bypass grafting.

Authors:  Hiroshi Okamoto; Akinori Tamenishi; Toshihiko Nishi; Takao Niimi
Journal:  Gen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2014-05-31
  4 in total

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