AI Article Synopsis

  • Cold hemagglutinin disease complicates cardiac surgery by risking red blood cell agglutination when a patient's temperature drops, necessitating careful surgical planning.
  • A case study of a 77-year-old man demonstrates successful management of this disease during off-pump coronary artery bypass surgery using an intravascular warming catheter, which helped maintain normal body temperature.
  • This method, focusing on thermal maintenance instead of traditional plasmapheresis, is the first reported instance of its kind in treating patients with cold hemagglutinin disease during surgery.

Article Abstract

Cold hemagglutinin disease with broad thermal amplitude and high titers presents challenges in treating cardiac-surgery patients. Careful planning is needed to prevent the activation of cold agglutinins and the agglutination of red blood cells as the patient's temperature drops during surgery. We describe our approach to mitigating cold agglutinin formation in a 77-year-old man with severe cold hemagglutinin disease who underwent off-pump coronary artery bypass surgery without the use of preoperative plasmapheresis. This experience shows that the use of an intravascular warming catheter can maintain normothermia and prevent the activation and subsequent formation of cold agglutinins. To our knowledge, this is the first reported use of this technique in a patient with cold hemagglutinin disease. The chief feature in this approach is the use of optimal thermal maintenance-rather than the more usual decrease in cold-agglutinin content by means of therapeutic plasma exchange.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4979402PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.14503/THIJ-15-5672DOI Listing

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