Perfusion
-
Dabigatran etexilate is a direct thrombin inhibitor approved for use in patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation. There is no currently available pharmacological therapy to reverse this renally cleared anticoagulant. Dabigatran has a low level of plasma protein binding and has been considered dialyzable. We used a pig model with renal artery ligation to exclude intrinsic drug excretion to examine the efficacy of ultrafiltration (UF) during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) for dabigatran removal. ⋯ UF in conjunction with CPB was ineffective at removing dabigatran. Heparin demonstrated a dabigatran-lowering effect, suggesting a possible drug interaction or assay impairment. Based on these findings, emergent cardiac surgery with UF on cardiopulmonary bypass to remove dabigatran is not advisable. Alternative forms of drug removal or reversal must be identified.
-
Does additional postoperative collection and processing of mediastinal shed blood with a cell salvage device reduce the number of allogeneic blood transfusions compared to intraoperative cell salvage alone? ⋯ The study included 99 patients; 50 in the C.A.T.S(®) and 49 in the CardioPat(®) group.There was no difference in the number of red blood cells (RBC) (C.A.T.S(®) group 43 units versus CardioPat(®) 50 units, p=0.74), fresh frozen plasma (C.A.T.S(®) 8 units versus CardioPat(®) 8 units, p=1.00) or platelets (C.A.T.S(®) 5 units versus CardioPat(®) 4 units, p=1.00) transfused during the hospital stay.Cardiac creatinine kinase (CK-MB) and troponin levels did not differ between the groups although a significant time effect (p<0.001) was present. Creatinine kinase (CK) levels were not different between the groups three hours after arrival in the intensive care unit (ICU) (CardioPat(®) group versus C.A.T.S(®) group, p=0.17). But, compared to the C.A.T.S(®) group on the first (350 [232-469] IU/L) and second postoperative days (325 [201-480] IU/L), the increase in CK levels was more in the CardioPat(®) group on the first (431 [286-642] IU/L, p=0.02) and second postoperative days (406 [239-760] IU/L, p=0.05), resulting in a difference between the groups (p=0.04) CONCLUSIONS: Postoperative cell salvage does not reduce transfusion requirements compared to intraoperative cell salvage alone, but results in elevated total CK levels that suggest haemolysis.