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Comparative Study
Ozonation of blood during extracorporeal circulation. I. Rationale, methodology and preliminary studies.
- V Bocci, N Di Paolo, G Garosi, C Aldinucci, E Borrelli, G Valacchi, F Cappelli, L Guerri, G Gavioli, F Corradeschi, R Rossi, F Giannerini, and P Di Simplicio.
- Institute of General Physiology, University of Siena, Italy. fisgen@unisi.it
- Int J Artif Organs. 1999 Sep 1; 22 (9): 645-51.
AbstractWe investigated whether exposure of blood ex-vivo to oxygen-ozone (O2-O3) through a gas exchanger is feasible and practical. We first evaluated the classical dialysis-type technique but we soon realized that semipermeable membranes are unsuitable because they are hydrophilic and vulnerable to O3. We therefore adopted a system with hydrophobic O3-resistant hollow fibers enclosed in a polycarbonate housing with a membrane area of about 0.5 m2. First we tested the system with normal saline, determining the production of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) at O3 concentrations from 5 to 40 microg/ml. We then evaluated critical parameters by circulating swine blood in vitro; this revealed that heparin is not an ideal anticoagulant for this system. Finally, we performed several experiments in sheep and defined optimal anticoagulant dose (sodium citrate, ACD), priming solution, volume of blood flow per min, volume and concentration of O2-O3 mixture flowing countercurrent with respect to blood and the time necessary for perfusion in vivo. The biochemical parameters showed that an O3 concentration as low as 10 microg/ml is effective; this means that gas exchange and O3 reactivity are rapid and capable of inducing biological effects. The sheep showed no adverse effects even after 50 min of extracorporeal circulation at higher O3 concentrations (20 to 40 microg/ml) but the exchanger became less effective (low pO2 values) due to progressive clogging with cells.
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