Annals of surgery
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Twenty-seven children with major sickle hemoglobinopathies underwent elective cholecystectomy for cholelithiasis. All were managed with a preoperative transfusion regimen to achieve a hemoglobin concentration of 11-14 g/dl with greater than 65% hemoglobin A. Intraoperative cholangiography revealed common bile duct stones in five patients, although only one case was diagnosed by preoperative ultrasonographic examination. ⋯ Four months after cholecystectomy, one boy had a small bowel obstruction requiring surgical re-exploration. No patients had transfusion-acquired infection, although one boy had erythrocyte allosensitization to Lewis A antigen. This preoperative transfusion regimen and careful perioperative management permits safe elective cholecystectomy in children with sickle cell disease.
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Complement activation was examined prospectively in 100 cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) patients. Plasma C3a desArg (C3a) increased (cannulation: 234 +/- 33 ng/mL; 20 minutes on CPB: 622 +/- 51; 2 hours after CPB: 1143 +/- 109, p less than 0.0001). C3a at 2 hours was higher in the 13 patients requiring mechanical ventilation for longer than 1 day (1023 +/- 274) than in the 67 without respiratory complication (568 +/- 45, p less than 0.004). ⋯ Serum dilution to 33% decreased ng/mL C5a generated in the same system from 200 to 76 with no effect on C3a. Addition of heparin to 20 U/mL decreased ng/mL C3a generated from 10,872 to 913 and C5a from 200 to 8. Thus, hypothermia, dilution, and heparin protect CPB patients from complement activation by reducing both generation of C3a/C5a and the subsequent cellular response of neutrophil activation.