The aim of this study was to demonstrate the clinical and biological benefits of heparin-coated circuits in routine coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). A prospective, randomized study was conducted in 80 patients undergoing routine CABG. Patients were randomized to either noncoated circuits (Group 1) or heparin-coated circuits (Group 2). A complete clinical evaluation was performed preoperatively at Days 0, 1, 2, and 3 and at discharge day and combined with extensive laboratory tests for hemostasis and inflammatory response. This study did not prove any major statistically significant clinical benefit of heparin-coated circuits in low risk patients. Postoperative bleeding, significantly less in the heparin-coated group, did not decrease significantly the number of transfused patients. Biological values were not changed significantly except for factor II and monocytes, which were higher in Group 2. Heparin-coated circuits offer minimal clinical and biological benefits for routine CABG surgery. However, they may prove beneficial for complex procedures or at-risk patients.
Use of cardiopulmonary support (CPS) by peripheral access with a membrane oxygenator has made considerable progress as a result of the development of centrifugal pumps, percutaneous cannulation, and preheparinized circuits. We have used CPS for resuscitation in 3 cases, for recovery after cardiotomy in 6 cases (myocardial insufficiency, 4; pulmonary arterial hypertension, 1; respiratory insufficiency, 1), and after heart transplantation in 1 case. Of these 10 patients, 3 died during CPS, 5 were successfully weaned, and 2 underwent heart transplantation. Use of CPS is expanding for emergency cardiac assistance. Installation is simple and rapid. It allows recovery of organs pending more invasive and costly techniques.
Giant cerebral aneurysms may be untreatable by conventional neurosurgical techniques. Early attempts to use circulatory assistance and deep hypothermia were abandoned due to hemorrhagic complications. More recently, interest in circulatory support for complex neurosurgical procedures has been renewed. A consecutive series of 8 patients were operated on for giant cerebral aneurysms with the combined use of deep hypothermia. The protocol included careful preoperative cardiovascular assessment, perfect intraoperative synergy between neurosurgical and cardiac teams, minimally invasive peripheral vascular access including two femoral vein (21 F) and single arterial (17 F) femoral cannulation, use of total Carmeda coating on BioMedicus pumps in closed circuits, and reduced heparinization without Protamine reversal. All cerebral aneurysms were successfully treated through deep hypothermia (15-18 degrees C) as assessed by intraoperative fluoroscopic controls and Doppler vascular assessment. Mean circulatory support time was 174.2 +/- 29.6 min. Circulatory arrest period was 20 +/- 12 min. All patients survived and were extubated within 48 h. No major deficit was observed clinically or on postoperative CT scan. No hemorrhagic complications occurred (mean transfusions was 2.2 blood units). This work supports an extensive use of heparin-coated surfaces for complex circulatory assist techniques, either for cardiac or extra cardiac complex procedures.
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