The Thoracic and cardiovascular surgeon
-
Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Aug 1998
Clinical TrialNeuropsychological changes after cardiopulmonary bypass for coronary artery bypass grafting.
An alarming incidence (1% to 83%) of neuropsychological dysfunction has been reported after operations using cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). The present clinical study re-evaluates these complications with current CPB technology in a strictly selected low-risk group of coronary artery bypass (CABG) patients. ⋯ Biochemical markers demonstrate significant postoperative cerebral injury during and immediately after CPB. However, CPB for CABG does not lead to marked impairment of neuropsychological scores, and clinically relevant neurological findings were observed in one patient only.
-
Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Aug 1998
Continuous, less invasive, hemodynamic monitoring in intensive care after cardiac surgery.
A pulse-contour-based method for continuous measurement of cardiac output (CO) and systemic vascular resistance (SVR) was tested and arterial thermodilution, used for calibration, was compared to pulmonary artery thermodilution. In 30 patients CO and SVR were measured by pulse contour analysis (COpc, SVRpc) 270 times in 24 h and compared to arterial (COart, SVRart) and pulmonary arterial (COpa, SVRpa) thermodilution measurements. The mean difference between COpa and COart was 0.26 L/min (3.6%) with a standard deviation (SD) of 0.7 L/min, the correlation coefficient was 0.96, and the coefficient of variation was 5.0% and 5.9% respectively. ⋯ Mean COpc and SVRpc did not differ significantly from COpa or COart and SVRpa or SVRart during the 24 h study period. It is concluded that COart correlates well with COpa and can be used to calibrate COpc. COpc and SVRpc agree with thermodilution-based CO and SVR without recalibration for 24 hours.