Literature DB >> 8975854

What is the best perfusion temperature for coronary revascularization?

R M Engelman1, A B Pleet, J A Rousou, J E Flack, D W Deaton, C A Gregory, P S Pekow.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: [corrected] A National Institutes of Health-funded clinical trial of patients undergoing coronary artery bypass randomized perfusate and myocardial preservation to cold, tepid, or warm temperatures. The goal of the trial was to evaluate neurologic function before and after operation (4 days and 1 month after operation) and to measure hematologic data for fibrinolytic potential.
METHODS: The three groups comprised 116 patients who completed neurologic evaluation by means of the Mathew scale out of 130 entered into the trial (37 cold group, 50 tepid, and 43 warm). Twenty-five patients had complete hematologic studies done. All three groups were comparable before operation. The myocardial preservation protocol used blood cardioplegic solution at cold (8 degrees to 10 degrees C), tepid (32 degrees C), or warm (37 degrees C) temperature and the systemic perfusate temperature during cardiopulmonary bypass was 20 degrees (cold), 32 degrees C (tepid), or 37 degrees (warm).
RESULTS: Patients in the cold group had a longer duration of intubation and postoperative hospitalization and a slightly but significantly higher peak postoperative creatine kinase MB level than patients in the warm group. There were no deaths. There was deterioration in Mathew scale findings in all three groups, and no distinction could be made between groups. However, a significantly higher number in the cold group had an abnormal postoperative neurologic examination result that prompted computed tomographic scanning (18.9% cold, 2% tepid, 9.3% warm). A cerebrovascular accident was documented by computed tomographic scanning in 8.1%, 0%, and 4.7% of patients in the cold, tepid, and warm groups, respectively (not significant). Hematologic data documented significantly increased fibrinolytic potential in the warm group.
CONCLUSIONS: Perfusion temperature is a factor in recovery from cardiopulmonary bypass. Cold has more adverse neurologic sequelae that prompt computed tomographic scanning whereas warm has more activation of fibrinolytic potential. Tepid is the best temperature for optimizing recovery from cardiopulmonary bypass.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8975854     DOI: 10.1016/S0022-5223(96)70021-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg        ISSN: 0022-5223            Impact factor:   5.209


  5 in total

Review 1.  Is cold or warm blood cardioplegia superior for myocardial protection?

Authors:  Udo Abah; Patrick Garfjeld Roberts; Muhammad Ishaq; Ravi De Silva
Journal:  Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg       Date:  2012-03-08

2.  Warm Blood Cardioplegia for Myocardial Protection: Concepts and Controversies.

Authors:  Taylor M James; Marcos Nores; John A Rousou; Nicole Lin; Sotiris C Stamou
Journal:  Tex Heart Inst J       Date:  2020-04-01

3.  Warm versus cold cardioplegia in cardiac surgery: A meta-analysis with trial sequential analysis.

Authors:  Thompson Ka Ming Kot; Jeffrey Shi Kai Chan; Saied Froghi; Dawnie Ho Hei Lau; Kara Morgan; Francesco Magni; Amer Harky
Journal:  JTCVS Open       Date:  2021-03-31

4.  Dendritic spines and pre-synaptic boutons are stable despite local deep hypothermic challenge and re-warming in vivo.

Authors:  Yicheng Xie; Shangbin Chen; Timothy Murphy
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-05-01       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 5.  Mechanisms of oxidative stress and myocardial protection during open-heart surgery.

Authors:  Nikolaos G Baikoussis; Nikolaos A Papakonstantinou; Chrysoula Verra; Georgios Kakouris; Maria Chounti; Panagiotis Hountis; Panagiotis Dedeilias; Michalis Argiriou
Journal:  Ann Card Anaesth       Date:  2015 Oct-Dec
  5 in total

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