J Cardiovasc Surg
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Pulsatile and nonpulsatile extracorporeal circulation using Capiox E terumo oxygenator: a comparison study with Ultrox and Maxima membrane oxygenators.
An open randomised, prospective study was undertaken on 90 patients who underwent routine myocardial revascularization. The aim of the study was to demonstrate that the Capiox E polypropylene fiber membrane oxygenator with a conventional single pulsatile/nonpulsatile blood pump for cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) was comparable in performance to that of the Maxima and the Ultrox membrane oxygenators using a double pump system. The patients were divided into six groups according to perfusion mode and oxygenator type. ⋯ The FiO2 was higher in the Capiox E groups 0.77 (PP) and 0.88 (NP) compared to Maxima/PP (0.66), /NP (0.65) and Ultrox/PP (0.64), /NP (0.63). Reciprocally, the venous saturation was higher in the Ultrox and Maxima groups compared to Capiox E at end of CPB. The study demonstrated that the CapioxE oxygenator with a single blood pump system can compare to the Maxima and Ultrox oxygenators with a double blood pump for CPB with regard to blood handling, oxygenation and fluid balance in routine cardiac surgery.
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Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is the most common procedure performed in adult cardiovascular surgery today. In our Department of Surgery at Baylor College of Medicine, we have experienced, as have most large programs, a trend to older patients, more comorbidity, worse ventricular function, and more redo CABG procedures. ⋯ Data for multiple arterial grafts is still evolving and conduit choice for other than the IMA to LAD graft is often debated. The purpose of this article is to review the current literature on conduit choice and to allow a rational, data driven approach to graft choice.
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Comparative Study
Clinical importance of measuring coronary graft flows in the revascularized heart. Ultrasonic or electromagnetic?
In the past, routine coronary graft flow measurement at the end of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was not universally adopted by cardiac surgeons due to the lack of reliable flow measurement techniques. The purpose of this study was to investigate the efficacy of ultrasonic and electromagnetic techniques in coronary graft flow measurements and to determine the relationship, if any, between intraoperative ultrasonic or electromagnetic coronary graft flows and postoperative early clinical outcome. ⋯ The ultrasonic flowmeter is well-suited for intraoperative assessment of arterial and venous coronary graft flows at the completion of CABG. There is a real potential for using intraoperative graft flow values to predict early outcome after coronary bypass.