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European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Vol 8, 91-96, Copyright © 1994 by European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
J Waaben, HR Sorensen, UL Andersen, K Gefke, J Lund, S Aggestrup, H Laursen and A Gjedde
Reduction of pump flow during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) reduces the
formation of microemboli and trauma to the blood components, reduces both
rewarming of the heart and the noncoronary collateral flow, and improves
surgical exposure. Recent studies indicate that a reduction in pump flow,
even at normothermia, does not increase the incidence of postoperative
cerebral dysfunction. We examined the cerebral consequences of 2 h of
normothermic CPB in pigs carried out at pump flows of either 70 ml/kg per
min or 50 ml/kg per min, and compared the results with those of a
nonperfused control group. We measured the regional cerebral glucose
metabolism and the regional capillary diffusion capacity simultaneously in
ten different brain regions. Brain morphology, the blood-brain barrier
permeability to serum proteins and the regional cerebral water content were
also determined in the same animals. Glucose metabolism decreased
significantly in both CPB groups (P < 0.001), and significant
differences were found between the capillary diffusion capacities of the
three groups (P < 0.05), with decreases in eight out of ten brain
regions examined in the 50 ml/kg per min group. The results indicate that a
reduction of pump flows from 70 ml/kg per min to 50 ml/kg per min is
deleterious to the brain, and that a pump flow of 70 ml/kg per min itself
has an injurious effect, when normothermic CPB is carried out for 2 h
without the use of vasoactive drugs to maintain the blood pressure. Mean
arterial blood pressure (MAP) rather than pump flow seemed to determine the
adequacy of the cerebral perfusion.
ARTICLES
Brain damage following low flow cardiopulmonary bypass in pigs
Department of Anesthesia, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
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