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J. Cardiothorac. Vasc. Anesth. · Oct 1997
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialProinflammatory cytokine release during pediatric cardiopulmonary bypass: influence of centrifugal and roller pumps.
- S S Ashraf, Y Tian, D Cowan, R Shaikh, M Parsloe, P Martin, and K G Watterson.
- Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Leeds General Infirmatory, UK.
- J. Cardiothorac. Vasc. Anesth. 1997 Oct 1; 11 (6): 718-22.
ObjectiveIt has been proposed that nonocclusive centrifugal pumps may elicit less blood cell trauma and hence a reduced inflammatory response than standard roller pumps. However, there have been no reports describing the impact of such pumps on proinflammatory cytokine release in pediatric cohorts.DesignA prospective randomized study was undertaken.SettingA regional cardiothoracic center of a university hospital.ParticipantsThirty-four pediatric patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) for the correction of complex congenital heart defects were recruited.InterventionsEither standard twin roller (n = 17), or centrifugal vortex (Biopump, Medtronic Biomedicus Inc, MN) (n = 17) blood pumping.Measurements And Main ResultsVenous blood was drawn (1) on induction of anesthesia, (2) 5 minutes on bypass, (3) end of CPB, (4) 30 minutes post-protamine, (5) 2 hours and (6) 24 hours postoperation. Neutrophil count, level of plasma leukocyte elastase, terminal complement complex (C5b-9); interleukin-6 (IL-6) and interleukin-8 (IL-8) were increased during and after CPB compared with the postinduction baseline. C5b-9 levels in both groups peaked at the end of CPB before returning to baseline at 24 hours: (median [range]), 564 (16 to 1,136) ng/mL in centrifugal group versus 508 (0 to 1,128) ng/mL in the roller group. IL-6 in both groups reached its peak level at 2 hours postprotamine (208 [98 to 411] pg/mL in centrifugal versus 205 [60-327] pg/mL in the roller group), before coming back to baseline at 24 hours. Plasma leukocyte elastase and IL-8 reached their maximum level 15 minutes after protamine administration: 215 (64 to 375) pg/mL in centrifugal versus 235 (87 to 410) pg/mL in roller group; and 700 (90 to 5,925) ng/mL versus 362 (120 to 3,400) ng/mL, respectively.ConclusionsThe current study confirms the proinflammatory nature of pediatric CPB surgery, but failed to show a significant advantage of centrifugal pumping over roller perfusion in terms of the inflammatory response.
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