To conserve blood during open heart surgery, cell savers and hemoconcentrators are used. Cell savers retrieve and filter shed blood from the operative field and then wash and separate reconcentrated erythrocytes from a supernatant by centrifugation. Hemoconcentrators are extracorporeal devices that extract an ultrafiltrate from the circulating perfusate during cardiopulmonary bypass. Both cell saver supernatant and hemoconcentrator ultrafiltrate are discarded. Twenty patients were anesthetized with a single dose of sufentanil, 30 microg/kg, and the cell saver supernatant and hemoconcentrator ultrafiltrate were analyzed for sufentanil. The supernatant contained only 0.1% of the total administered dose. Hemoconcentrators from two different manufacturers were tested, and 0.1% of the administered sufentanil was detected in one ultrafiltrate and none was found in the other. Thirty minutes after induction of anesthesia, the plasma sufentanil concentration was 8.5 ng/mL (1.3% of the given dose); 1 hour later, it was 4.9 ng/mL (0.8%). During cardiopulmonary bypass, the plasma level decreased to 2.5 ng/mL (0.6%); after bypass, it fell to 1.5 ng/mL (0.3%). It is concluded that intravenous (IV) sufentanil rapidly leaves the plasma compartment, and little remains available to be extracted by the devices used to process and conserve blood.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0888-6296(88)90053-1 | DOI Listing |
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