Introduction: The origination of blood loss after cardiac surgery is not fully explained, but is related to operation trauma and use of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). However, the extent of their contribution is incompletely known and might differ between distinct operation procedures.
Materials And Methods: Three groups of CABG procedures were studied: 1) off-pump coronary artery bypass surgery (OPCAB, n=11) without CPB, 2) CABG with use of CPB (CABG, n=11) and 3) CABG with use of CPB combined with aortic valve replacement (AVR, n=11).
Background: Prolonged or excessive blood loss is a common complication after cardiac surgery. Blood remnants and clots, remaining in the pericardial space in spite of chest tube drainage, induce high fibrinolytic activity that may contribute to bleeding complications. Continuous postoperative pericardial flushing (CPPF) with an irrigation solution may reduce blood loss by preventing the accumulation of clots.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: As the indication for antiplatelet medication expands, patients may be exposed to an increased risk of excessive blood loss when cardiac surgery is required. The optimal timing to stop acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) or ASA combined with clopidogrel (ASA+Clo) before surgery is the subject of controversy.
Methods: A total of 1065 patients were selected from a prospective randomized study on the effect of a fibrin sealant application in coronary artery bypass graft surgery [Fibrin sealant Induced Blood Exposure Reduction study;
Registration Number: NTR1386 (http://www.
Blood Coagul Fibrinolysis
September 2015
Fibrinogen as precursor of fibrin plays an essential role in clot formation. There are three main mechanisms associated with a reduction in fibrinogen concentration during cardiac surgery: hemodilution, consumption, and degradation. Moreover, early fibrinogen degradation products (FgDPs) can interfere with normal fibrin formation of intact fibrinogen.
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