Cardiovascular surgery (London, England)
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Myocardial beta-blockade as an alternative to cardioplegic arrest during coronary artery surgery.
The authors' recent experimental work has demonstrated that myocardial protection using continuous coronary perfusion with warm beta-blocker-enriched blood avoids myocardial ischaemia and minimizes myocardial oedema formation, thus completely preserving left ventricle function. The purpose of this clinical study was to compare this alternative technique in terms of structural and functional myocardial protection with the routinely used crystalloid Bretschneider cardioplegia. Sixty coronary artery surgery patients were randomized to receive either crystalloid cardioplegia or continuous coronary perfusion with warm blood enriched with the ultra-short acting beta-blocker esmolol. ⋯ The post-cardiopulmonary bypass fractional area of contraction was similar in both groups (beta-blocker: 65 +/- 14%; crystalloid cardioplegia: 62 +/- 16%); however, beta-blocker patients required less inotropic stimulation (dopamine: beta-blocker: 2.9 +/- 2.5 versus crystalloid cardioplegia: 5.0 +/- 2.3 microg/kg per min; P < 0.05). The data suggest that continuous coronary perfusion with warm esmolol-enriched blood results in better myocardial protection compared with crystalloid cardioplegia. It is concluded that the concept of beta-blocker-induced cardiac surgical conditions may be a useful alternative for myocardial protection during coronary artery surgery.