Publications by authors named "K T Kiviluoma"

Article Synopsis
  • This study looked at how long doctors can safely stop blood flow to the lower body during surgeries on the aorta without hurting the spinal cord.
  • They tested this on pigs and found that more pigs survived the surgery if blood flow was stopped for 65 minutes instead of 90 minutes.
  • The results showed that stopping blood flow for too long can lead to serious problems, like paralysis or death, especially if it goes over 65 minutes.
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Objectives: Paraplegia is a devastating complication in aortic aneurysm surgery. Modifying the spinal cord vasculature is a promising method in spinal cord protection. The aim of this study was to assess whether the spinal cord can be primed by occluding thoracic segmental arteries before simulated aneurysm repair in a porcine model.

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Surgical repair of thoracic aorta can compromise blood flow of the spinal cord. To mitigate spinal cord ischemia (SCI) additional protection methods are needed. In experimental studies remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) has proven to be an effective method of protecting organs from ischemia.

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Objectives: The optimal temperature management of hypothermic circulatory arrest is still controversial. Moderate hypothermia preserves cerebral autoregulation and shortens cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) duration. However, moderate hypothermia alone has inferior organ protection to deep hypothermia, so adjuncts that increase the ischaemic tolerance are needed.

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Hypothermic circulatory arrest includes a remarkable risk for neurological injury. Diazoxide, a mitochondrial adenosine triphosphate-dependent potassium ion (K+ATP) channel opener, is known to have cardioprotective effects. We assessed its efficacy in preventing ischemic injury in a clinically relevant animal model.

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