The Annals of thoracic surgery
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Five patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) procedures were extensively monitored because of anticipated high risk for neurological complications. Arterial blood pressure (BP), central venous pressure, and epidural intracranial pressure (EDP) were continuously recorded throughout CPB; thus, information on the cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) was also continuously available (CPP = BP - EDP). Cerebral electrical activity was recorded by a cerebral function monitor. ⋯ During CPB with constant temperature, hematocrit, and PaCO2, the effect of changes in CPP on MCA flow velocity was recorded and analyzed. During nonpulsatile, moderately hypothermic (28 degrees to 32 degrees C), low-flow (1.5 L/min/m2) CPB, there was no evidence of cerebral autoregulation, with CPP levels ranging from 20 to 60 mm Hg. The CO2 reactivity, however, was clearly present and in the range of 1.9 to 4.1%/mm Hg, indicating that there was a dissociation between cerebral autoregulation and CO2 reactivity under these circumstances.
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To identify possible risk factors for the occurrence of stroke during coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), the cases of 3,279 consecutive patients having isolated CABG from 1974 to 1983 were reviewed. During this period, the risk of death fell from 3.9% to 2.6%. The stroke rate, however, fell initially but then rose from 0.57% in 1979 to 2.4% in 1983. ⋯ A case-control study involving all 56 stroke victims and 112 control patients was used to identify those risk factors significantly associated with the development of stroke in univariate analysis: increased age (63 versus 57 years in stroke patients and controls, respectively; p less than 0.0001); preexisting cerebrovascular disease (20% versus 8%; p less than 0.03); severe atherosclerosis of the ascending aorta (14% versus 3%; p less than 0.005); protracted cardiopulmonary bypass time (122 minutes versus 105 minutes; p less than 0.005); and severe perioperative hypotension (23% versus 4%; p less than 0.0001). Other variables not found to correlate with postoperative stroke included previous myocardial infarction, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, lower extremity vascular disease, preoperative left ventricular function, and intraoperative perfusion techniques. Elderly patients who have preexisting cerebrovascular disease or severe atherosclerosis of the ascending aorta or who require extensive revascularization procedures have a significantly increased risk of postoperative stroke.
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Doppler echocardiography was used to determine the site and size of a ventricular septal defect in a patient with a penetrating wound of the heart. Additional physiological measurements by Doppler study, including pulmonary artery pressure and degree of left-to-right shunting, were helpful in deciding on surgical closure of the defect as the definitive therapy in this patient. Associated intracardiac defects (e.g., mitral or tricuspid regurgitation) can be excluded by Doppler echocardiography.
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One hundred six consecutive patients with injuries to the tracheobronchial tree who were admitted to the emergency room of the Tulane Medical Center Hospital or the Charity Hospital of Louisiana at New Orleans over a period of almost 20 years were analyzed retrospectively. Penetrating trauma of the neck or chest was reported in 100 of the patients, and only 6 had blunt trauma to the neck or thorax as the cause of injury. There were 18 deaths among the 106 patients (16.98%), including 11 (13.75%) of 80 with injuries of the cervical trachea. ⋯ Hemoptysis was an unreliable signal of serious injury, being present in only 28 of the patients. Patients who had major vascular injuries combined with trachea involvement were generally not salvageable. In regard to morbidity and mortality, the most common preventable errors were delay in diagnosis and treatment of tracheobronchial injuries, missed esophageal injuries, massive aspiration of blood, and abdominal vascular injuries.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)