• Der Anaesthesist · Oct 1994

    Clinical Trial

    [Perioperative endothelin, ACTH and cortisol plasma concentrations in coronary bypass patients].

    • J Hähnel, D Mutschler, W Huhn, T Haak, K H Lindner, M Lass, C Seefelder, T Schricker, and M Georgieff.
    • Universitätsklinik für Anästhesiologie, Ulm.
    • Anaesthesist. 1994 Oct 1; 43 (10): 635-41.

    Study ObjectiveTo follow up endothelin (ET), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), and cortisol levels in patients undergoing aortocoronary bypass grafting (CABG) and to determine whether these are extracted from plasma by the pulmonary circulation.DesignConvenience sample trial.SettingUniversity hospital.PatientsEight male routine CABG patients without appreciable concomitant disease.InterventionsPatients were given anaesthesia in a strictly standardised manner using etomidate, flunitrazepam, fentanyl, and pancuronium. Nitroglycerin was administered prior to cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) at 2 mg/h and dopamine as the only catecholamine starting from CPB weaning until the end of sampling at 3.5-5 micrograms/kg.min. Samples were drawn in rapid sequence from cannulated radial and a distal pulmonary arteries (Swan-Ganz catheter) at eight sampling times starting after induction of anaesthesia and catheter placement and finishing 22 h after the end of operation.Measurements And ResultsET levels were determined by an ET-1, 2, 3-sensitive radioimmunoassay (RIA), ACTH and cortisol by commercially available RIA kits. There was significant (P = 0.032, linear regression analysis) correlation between ET and cortisol from pulmonary arterial samples. ET was significantly (P = 0.042, two-tailed Wilcoxon test) extracted by the pulmonary circulation after induction of anaesthesia. This pulmonary-systemic arterial difference nearly disappeared intraoperatively, but tended to be restored 22 h after the end of operation at an approximately twofold increased level.ConclusionsNo interrelation between ET and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis could be established by the ET, ACTH, and cortisol plasma levels. However, the significant correlation between perioperative ET and cortisol lends further support to the hypothesis of ET release by cortisol from vascular smooth-muscle cells. There is a net pulmonary clearance of ET in patients prior to CABG that is lost intra- and early postoperatively, but tends to be restored on the 1st day thereafter at an increased level.

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