We considered that, with modern perfusion equipment and mildly hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass, protracted post-operative ventilation in an intensive care unit (ITU) is no longer required after most cardiac operations. We used a three-bedded cardiac recovery area (CRA) within the operating suite for 1,000 patients between January 1990 and June 1991. Forty-five patients with special needs were managed in the ITU. The time to extubation (T50%; range) for coronary bypass, aortic valve, mitral valve, and double-valve patients was 2.0 (0-42), 2.5 (0-12), 3.0 (0-15), and 3.0 (1-36) hours, respectively. Recovery beds were re-used allowing 5-6 operations daily. The difference in nursing staff complement for a CRA versus ITU bed was 4.5/7.8. Patient management was by nurse specialists supported by cardiac surgeons. Intervention by cardiac anaesthetists or intensivists was limited to specific ventilatory problems or renal failure. The early extubation policy failed in ten patients (five coronary, three aortic, one mitral and one double-valve patient) through poor pre-operative respiratory function, left ventricular failure or intra-operative events. The overall mortality in CRA was 1.4%. The mean duration of post-operative stay was 7 days (range 5-12). We conclude that a CRA staffed by nurse practitioners provides a safe and effective alternative to the anaesthetist-managed ITU. A rapid turnover of CRA beds removes the constraints of ITU bed availability.
Mannitol is often included in the priming solution of the heart-lung machine used during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). This study was set up to evaluate the effect of different doses of mannitol on human patients. Patients receiving 10 g of mannitol (n = 18) had an increased diuresis only during the bypass period (mean time = 87 min) when compared with a control group (n = 19) who did not receive mannitol. Patients receiving 20 g of mannitol (n = 19) had a significantly greater diuresis than both the control group and the 10 g group and the diuresis continued on throughout the immediate postbypass period (total mean time approximately 3 h). Patients receiving 30 g of mannitol (n = 20) also had a significantly greater diuresis that continued on during the first hour in the intensive care unit (ICU) (total mean time approximately 4 h). After 6 h in the ICU, all three groups of mannitol-treated patients equally demonstrated a trend towards an increased diuresis over the control group, which became a significant increase by 12 h in the ICU (p = 0.001) despite indications that the mannitol had been cleared from the body. These results suggest that there is an improvement of renal function post-CPB if mannitol is included in the CPB prime which may be due to an amelioration of the ischaemic effects of bypass on the kidneys.
A prospective study was conducted with the aims of 1) determining the normal trans-oxygenator pressure gradient characteristics for a range of oxygenators and 2) determining the characteristics, incidence and outcome of abnormally raised gradients. The trans-oxygenator pressure gradient was monitored in 3684 patients undergoing open-heart surgery in eight different hospitals. When the normal pressure gradient was measured during cardiopulmonary bypass in mmHg/L blood flow, a constant figure was obtained which was specific for each oxygenator. This gradient was abnormally raised in 16 cases (one in every 230 cases) and was raised to such an extent in three of these cases that an emergency oxygenator changeout was required (one in every 1228 cases). Among the 16 reported incidents, three different patterns of gradient changes occurred, suggesting the possibility that there were three different aetiologies. In nine of these incidents, the pressure gradient was normal immediately upon going on bypass, but rose rapidly to a plateau value, which then returned to the normal value within 40 minutes. In three cases, the pressure gradient was raised immediately upon going on bypass and then rapidly returned to the baseline. In one case, the pressure gradient was raised immediately upon going on bypass and stayed raised throughout the operation.
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