Background: The aim of our study was to evaluate the efficacy of myocardial protection during coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) in cold blood intermittent (CBIC) and warm continuous blood cardioplegia (WCBC). To assess myocardial necrosis, Troponin T, a structural protein belonging to the troponin complex, was measured. Troponin T is released in the blood stream 4 hours after myocardial damage, and it does not cross-react with the isomeric form of the skeletal muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy: A lipid emulsion containing 10 percent medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) and 10 percent long-chain triglycerides (LCT) was infused at a rate of 1 ml/kg/h (3.3 mg/kg/min) for 2 h, in 12 patients (2 males, 10 females; mean age, 54 +/- 3 (SEM) years; range, 34 to 67 years) 24 h after open-heart surgery (mitral valve replacement).
Methods: Hemodynamic factors (pulmonary and radial artery indwelling catheters), oxygen and carbon dioxide partial pressures, oxygen saturation, oxygen delivery and consumption, and intrapulmonary shunt fraction were obtained before, during, and after lipid infusion (for 2 h), at 30-s intervals, along with some metabolic indexes (triglycerides, free fatty acids, glucose, insulin, lactate, acetoacetate).
A total of 210 patients consecutively submitted to heart surgery at the Parma University Hospital and transfused with 1,898 units of blood were followed after transfusion in order to evaluate both the incidence of anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) seroconversion in non-A, non-B post-transfusion hepatitis (PTH-NANB) cases and the usefulness of the screening for anti-HCV in comparison with that for serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) values in preventing PTH-NANB transmission. Fifteen recipients developed PTH-NANB (group A); ten of them (66.6%) showed anti-HCV seroconversion within 3-12 months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relationships between cell metabolism and both hemodynamics and oxygen transport/utilization (VO2/DO2) pattern were evaluated intra and postoperatively in eight patients undergoing major valvular heart surgery with the aid of moderately hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Quadriceps femoris specimens were obtained by the needle biopsy technique for muscle ATP, ADP, AMP, phosphocreatine (PCr), creatine and lactate determination at anesthesia induction, after CPB, as well as in the ICU 18 h after surgery. Moreover, hemodynamic variables, oxygen transport and utilization indices, and plasma lactate were measured at the same intervals and throughout the CPB period.
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