The Annals of thoracic surgery
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Case Reports
Portable cardiopulmonary bypass: resuscitation from prolonged ice-water submersion and asystole.
Accidental hypothermia associated with near-drowning and cardiac arrest has a high mortality, especially in the adult. We report the resuscitation of a 31-year-old man who suffered extended ice-water submersion, severe hypothermia (23 degrees C), and prolonged (> or = 78 minutes) cardiac asystole. A modified portable cardiopulmonary bypass system and femoral-femoral cannulation in the Emergency Department permitted the rapid institution of core rewarming, oxygenation, and controlled reperfusion, with a successful outcome. Rapid initiation of cardiopulmonary bypass outside the operating room can be an initial treatment option in this unique clinical situation.
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Mediastinal bleeding can be a problem after cardiac surgery, either as a result of coagulation derangements or technical problems. We evaluated 100 patients, treated with temporary chest packing for intractable bleeding, of 9,383 undergoing open heart operations during a 10-year period. Preoperatively, 60 of these patients had one or more predisposing factors for bleeding. ⋯ Sternal wound infection, generalized sepsis, and sternal dehiscence was present in 24 patients, 8 of whom died. The venue for inserting or removing the packs did not affect the incidence of infections. Our experience suggests that packing of the chest after cardiac procedures for intractable bleeding allows a reasonable patient salvage rate and complication risks.
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We performed simultaneous graft replacement of the total aortic arch and ascending aorta for type A aortic dissection with a patent false lumen extending through the arch into the descending or abdominal aorta. During the past 7 years, this procedure was performed in 42 patients (28 men and 14 women), aged 20 to 72 years (mean age, 50 years). Nineteen patients underwent the procedure during the acute period, and 23 during the chronic period. ⋯ There were 3 hospital deaths (7.1%), 1 resulting from acute dissection (5.3%) and 2 from chronic dissection (8.7%). Among the type A dissections, total arch graft replacement has been indicated in the setting of rupture of the aortic arch, arch dissection, and Marfan's syndrome. However, with increasing experience in arch reconstructions and improvement in outcome, the indications could be expanded to include all type A aortic dissections with a patent false lumen in the descending aorta.
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Prenatal correction of certain cardiac lesions with a poor prognosis may have advantages over postnatal repair. For this to be done, safe and effective support of the fetal circulation must be devised. Studies involving fetal cardiac bypass have demonstrated progressive fetal hypoxemia, hypercapnia, and acidosis, indicating placental dysfunction. ⋯ At the lower flow rate, mean aortic pressure, arterial pH, and oxygen tension decreased whereas carbon dioxide tension and lactate levels increased when compared with prebypass levels. At the higher flow rate mean aortic pressure, pH, oxygen tension, carbon dioxide tension, and lactate levels remained similar to prebypass levels during the 30-minute study period. When the animals were weaned from the bypass circuit after studies at high flow rates, arterial oxygen tension and pH decreased whereas carbon dioxide tension increased to levels similar to those in the low-flow group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)