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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 104, 626-631, Copyright © 1992 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
BS Allen, GD Buckberg, ER Rosenkranz, W Plested, J Skow, E Mazzei and R Scanlan
This retrospective analysis tests the hypothesis that topical cardiac
hypothermia is an unnecessary adjunct to intraoperative myocardial
protection and an avoidable cause of pulmonary morbidity in patients with
coronary disease receiving blood cardioplegia. The hospital records of 150
nonrandomized consecutive patients undergoing elective and emergency
isolated coronary revascularization were reviewed. All patients received
multidose cold blood cardioplegia followed by warm blood cardioplegic
reperfusion distributed through grafts. Fifty patients received iced slush,
50 received topical 4 degrees C saline, and no topical cooling was used in
50 others. Patients groups were comparable in number of grafts (3.7 versus
3.5 versus 3.5) and crossclamp time (61 versus 62 versus 61 minutes). More
emergency operations were performed in the patients receiving no topical
hypothermia (12/50 versus 8/50 versus 7/50). Postoperative x-ray films were
reviewed by a radiologist who did not know of patient grouping.
Postoperative results were comparable in hemodynamics, inotropic
requirements (10/50 ice versus 8/50 saline versus 5/50 no cooling),
myocardial infarction (1/50 versus 2/50 versus 2/50), and enzymes
(aspartate aminotransferase myocardial band creatine kinase). No patient
died. Ice topical hypothermia (versus no topical cooling) was associated
with more left pleural effusions (25/50 versus 9/50; p less than 0.05),
atelectasis (33/50 versus 18/50; p less than 0.05), elevated left
hemidiaphragms (13/50 versus 0/50; p less than 0.05), and longer
postoperative hospitalization (11.2 versus 8.5 days; p less than 0.05).
Topical 4 degrees C saline reduced diaphragmatic elevation and pleural
effusion (versus topical ice) but was associated with more atelectasis
(34/50 versus 18/50; p less than 0.05) than no topical cooling. These data
suggest that routine topical hypothermia is an unnecessary adjunct to blood
cardioplegic protection in patients with coronary disease, since
supplemental topical cooling does not improve postoperative hemodynamics or
reduce inotropic requirements, enzyme release, or prevalence of
postoperative myocardial infarction, and it increases pulmonary morbidity,
which can be reduced by its avoidance.
ARTICLES
Topical cardiac hypothermia in patients with coronary disease. An unnecessary adjunct to cardioplegic protection and cause of pulmonary morbidity
Department of Surgery, UCLA School of Medicine.
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