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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Systemic leukocyte filtration during cardiopulmonary bypass.
- A Fabbri, J Manfredi, C Piccin, G Soffiati, M R Carta, E Gasparotto, and G Nardon.
- Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Vicenza General Hospital, Italy.
- Perfusion. 2001 Mar 1; 16 Suppl: 11-8.
AbstractCardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) induces a whole body inflammatory response leading to postoperative lung dysfunction. Activated leukocytes may play a role in the pathogenesis of pulmonary dysfunction. We evaluated postoperative lung function after the use of leukocyte-depleting filters incorporated in the extracorporeal circuit during CPB. From November 1997 to March 2000, 40 patients underwent isolated coronary artery bypass grafting. Patients were randomly allocated to the leukocyte-depletion group (group F, 20 patients) or to the control group (group C, 20 patients). There was no significant difference between the two groups with respect to age, sex, weight, height, body surface area, haemoglobin and haematocrit levels, preoperative left ventricular ejection fraction, cooling temperature, aortic crossclamping and CBP duration. Blood samples were drawn preoperatively, at aortic declamping, 60 min after CPB, after arriving at the intensive care unit (ICU) and 24 h after the operation. We analysed blood cell count, elastase, interleukin-8 (IL-8) and tumour necrosis factor (TNF-alpha) levels and continuous monitoring of arterial blood gases in the intensive care unit (ICU). The analysis of total circulating white blood cells (WBCs) showed a significant reduction of WBCs in both groups soon after aortic declamping [from the right atrium: 6.4 x 10(9)/l +/- 1.4 x 10(9)/l in group F vs 10.3 +/- 1.8 x 10(9)/l in group C (p<0.05); from the left atrium: 5.8 +/- 1.3 x 10(9)/l in group F vs 8.4 +/- 1.9 x 10(9)/l in group C (p<0.05)] and after 60 min of CPB [7.1 +/- 2.2 x 10(9)/l in group F vs 10.4 +/- 1.8 x 10(9)/l in group C (p<0.05)]. The analysis of circulating neutrophils showed similar findings in both groups. Elastase levels increased during CPB in both groups with a peak at the end of CPB without significant difference between the two groups (group C: 260 +/- 148 microg/l vs group F: 371 +/- 68 microg/l). The decrease of plasmatic elestase levels was observed, for both groups, in the 24 h after CPB. There was no difference in intubation time between the two groups (16.4 h for group C vs 11.2 h for group F). Pulmonary function tested by pulmonary respiratory index [RI = partial pressure of oxygen/fraction of inspired oxygen (PaO2/FiO2 x 100)] did not show significant difference between the two groups, either arriving in the ICU (group C RI 265 vs group F RI 322), or after 3 h (group RI 304 vs group F RI 305) or after 6 h (group C RI 292 vs group F RI 319). Leukocyte-depleting filters reduce with blood cells count during CPB, but, in this study, WBC depletion did not significantly improve clinical conditions or laboratory finding.
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