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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 95, 625-630, Copyright © 1988 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
JA Rousou, RM Engelman, RH Breyer, H Otani, S Lemeshow and DK Das
The ideal temperature and hematocrit level of blood cardioplegia has not
been clearly established. This study was undertaken (a) to determine the
optimal temperature of blood cardioplegia and (b) to study the effect of
hematocrit levels in blood cardioplegia. A comparison of myocardial
preservation was done among seven groups of animals on the basis of
variations in hematocrit levels and temperature of oxygenated cardioplegic
solution. The experimental protocol consisted of a 2-hour hypothermic
cardioplegic arrest followed by 1 hour of normothermic reperfusion. Group 1
received oxygenated crystalloid cardioplegic solution at 10 degrees C.
Groups 2 through 7 received oxygenated blood cardioplegic solution with the
following hematocrit values and temperatures: (2) 10%, 10 degrees C; (3)
10%, 20 degrees C; (4) 10%, 30 degrees C; (5) 20%, 10 degrees C; (6) 20%,
20 degrees C; and (7) 20%, 30 degrees C. Parameters studied include
coronary blood flow, myocardial oxygen extraction, myocardial oxygen
consumption, and myocardial high-energy phosphate levels of adenosine
triphosphate and creatine phosphate during control (prearrest), arrest, and
reperfusion. Myocardial oxygen consumption at 30 degrees C during arrest
was significantly higher than at 10 degrees C and 20 degrees C, which
indicates continued aerobic metabolic activity at higher temperature.
Myocardial oxygen consumption and the levels of adenosine triphosphate and
creatine phosphate during reperfusion were similar in all seven groups.
Myocardial oxygen extraction (a measure of metabolic function after
ischemia) during initial reperfusion was significantly lower in the 30
degrees C blood group than in the 10 degrees C blood group at either
hematocrit level and in the oxygenated crystalloid group, which suggests
inferior preservation. The hematocrit level of blood cardioplegia did not
affect adenosine triphosphate or myocardial oxygen consumption or
extraction. It appears from this study that blood cardioplegia at 10
degrees C and oxygenated crystalloid cardioplegia at 10 degrees C are
equally effective. Elevating blood cardioplegia temperature to 30 degrees
C, however, reduces the ability of the solution to preserve metabolic
function regardless of hematocrit level. Therefore, the level of
hypothermia is important in blood cardioplegia, whereas hematocrit level
has no detectable impact, and cold oxygenated crystalloid cardioplegia is
as effective as hypothermic blood cardioplegia.
ARTICLES
The effect of temperature and hematocrit level of oxygenated cardioplegic solutions on myocardial preservation
Department of Surgery, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington.
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