Publications by authors named "F O Bohls"

Cardiopulmonary bypass surgical techniques that allow a surgeon to operate on the infant's heart use an extracorporeal circuit consisting of a pump, oxygenator, arterial and venous reservoirs, cannulae, an arterial filter, and tubing. The extracorporeal technique currently used in infants and neonates is sometimes associated with neurologic damage. We are developing a modified cardiopulmonary bypass system for neonates that has been tested in vitro and in one animal in vivo.

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We describe several in vitro experiments showing evidence that pulsatile flow hemodialysis enhances ultrafiltration volume and molecular clearance as compared with steady flow hemodialysis. A new pulsatile pump and a conventional roller pump were compared using different hollow fiber dialyzers and a simulated blood solution containing urea, aspartame and vitamin B-12 at different flow rates and configurations. Ultrafiltration volume and concentration of urea, aspartame and B-12 were measured and molecular clearance (K) calculated.

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In 1990, the NIH formally recognized the need for investigation of the problem of damaging the effects of cardiopulmonary bypass, issuing RFA HL-90-12-H, which emphasized production of neurologic defects in the very young and the elderly. The authors were at that time involved in comparison of pulsatile flow to steady flow cardiopulmonary bypass in large ungulates. The world literature recognizes five damaging effects of steady flow cardiopulmonary bypass that can be mitigated by pulsatile flow: metabolic acidosis, interstitial fluid accumulation, elevated systemic vascular resistance, arteriovenous shunting, and impaired brain oxygenation.

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A unique preload responsive pulsatile pump was compared to a centrifugal pump in total cardiac support in 25-kg canines (n = 6, each group) in the left atrial-to-aorta mode during 5 h of ventricular fibrillation. With steady flow, there was immediate drop in output from 2.1 +/- 1.

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Currently two pumps are used for cardiopulmonary bypass, the roller pump and the centrifugal or vortex pump. Both are steady-flow pumps. The procedure of cardiopulmonary bypass possesses a finite morbidity and mortality.

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