Cardiovascular surgery (London, England)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Influence of normothermic systemic perfusion temperature on cold myocardial protection during coronary artery bypass surgery.
To determine the effect of normothermic systemic perfusion on myocardial injury when using cold cardioplegic techniques in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery. ⋯ Patients were similar with regard to preoperative and intraoperative characteristics Four patients showed ECG changes typical of perioperative myocardial infarction but remained clinically well (28 degrees C, one; 32 degrees C, one; 37 degrees C, two). In the remaining 62 patients, serum troponin T increased significantly from a mean baseline value of 0.02 ng/ml to 1.5+/-0.9 ng/ml 4 hours after removal of the aortic cross-clamp (P<0.0001). Similarly, troponin I increased from 0.06 ng/ml to 0.63+/-0.47 ng/ml 12 hours after reperfusion (P<0.0001). Serum concentrations of both markers subsequently declined with time but remained higher than preoperative values at 48 hours. There were no differences between the three groups with respect to peak and cumulative serum troponin release. Normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass did not compromise the efficacy of cold myocardial protection when assessed by serum troponin concentrations in low risk patients undergoing coronary revascularization.