International journal of clinical monitoring and computing
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Int J Clin Monit Comput · Jan 1991
Monitoring of coagulation status using thrombelastography during paediatric open heart surgery.
Thrombelastography (TEG) has proved useful in identifying coagulopathies (via assessment of clot elasticity properties) during hepatic surgery, but its role in cardiac surgery has as yet not been defined. Twenty-two children [11M, 11F, mean age (range) 4.9 (0.1-16) years] undergoing open heart surgery were investigated [1] preoperatively, [2] 15 min post protamine, [3] 2 h and [4] 24 h postoperatively using TEG. Comparisons were made between pre- and postoperative measurements and haematological indices. ⋯ TEG predicted with 100% (8/8) accuracy increased post-operative bleeding. The specificity of TEG prediction of future bleeding was 73% [8/11]. Alterations in TEG parameters merit further evaluation as markers of postoperative haemorrhage.
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In the control of the circulation it is suggested there is merit in describing states which are the object of each therapy. Considering the determinants of venous return rather than those of cardiac output, we suggest that the mean systemic filling pressure is a parsimonious description of the volume state. A method is described of deriving a mean systemic filling pressure analogue based on stopping the flow in a notional regional systemic circulation. ⋯ The systemic vascular resistance is a conventional measure of the state of arteriolar resistance. We suggest that the ratio (PM - PRA)/PM (where PRA is the right atrial pressure) is a global measure of the effect of cardioactive drugs. Studies are reported in which the mean blood pressure, right atrial pressure and cardiac output are simultaneously controlled within desired tolerances using state based control.