The Thoracic and cardiovascular surgeon
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Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Aug 1997
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialRight ventricle is protected better by warm continuous than by cold intermittent retrograde blood cardioplegia in patients with obstructed right coronary artery.
Preservation of the right-ventricular (RV) myocardium is a clinical challenge especially in patients with occluded right coronary artery, in whom antegrade cardioplegia cannot reach areas distal to the stenosis. Retrograde administration of cardioplegia has been thought to overcome the problem, but it has been blamed for inadequate distribution to the RV and possibly poorer functional recovery of this ventricle. Adapting the hypothesis that warm blood cardioplegia may offer better distribution and a more effective supply of oxygen to the arrested heart, we compared RV function in a randomised trial in patients with significant right and left coronary artery disease, after either warm continuous (warm group, n = 15) or intermittent cold (cold group, n = 14) retrograde blood cardioplegia. ⋯ Creatine kinase cardiac isoenzyme release was greater in the cold group (p < 0.01). The relationship between left-ventricular stroke work and corresponding preload did not differ between the groups. It can be concluded that recovery of RV function after coronary surgery was better in terms of ejection fraction and preload-related stroke work with warm continuous cardioplegia than with intermittent cold cardioplegia, this along with lower cardiac enzyme release suggesting better RV protection.