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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 96, 266-270, Copyright © 1988 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
ML Dewar, G Walsh, RC Chiu, G Kochamba, J Gutkowska, J Genest and M Cantin
Patients who undergo cardiopulmonary bypass experience derangements of
complement activation, prostaglandin metabolism, and catecholamine
secretion, which have all been posited to explain postoperative fluid
retention and paroxysmal hypertension. Atrial natriuretic factor, a
hormonal peptide released by the cardiac atria, regulates vascular volume
by increasing sodium excretion and decreasing vasomotor tone and
catecholamine synthesis. We examined its possible response to
cardiopulmonary bypass in 23 patients (18 having cardiopulmonary bypass
and, as a control group, five having thoracotomy) who underwent serial
blood sampling to measure plasma atrial natriuretic factor levels before,
during, and after operation. Thoracotomy alone had no effect on atrial
natriuretic factor levels before, during, and after operation. Patients
with cardiac valve lesions who had a higher incidence of arrhythmias and
congestive heart failure showed elevated preoperative atrial natriuretic
factor values (p less than 0.05). Normally, atrial natriuretic factor
release is directly related to atrial filling pressure, but all patients
having cardiopulmonary bypass revealed a paradoxical rise of atrial
natriuretic factor during cardiopulmonary bypass (p less than 0.01) and a
lack of correlation between atrial filling pressure and atrial natriuretic
factor secretion in the early postoperative period. The atrial natriuretic
factor response to pulmonary wedge pressure began to normalize 24 hours
after operation. The unique reaction of this recently discovered cardiac
hormone to cardiopulmonary bypass suggests its possible role in the
pathophysiologic response to cardiac operation.
ARTICLES
Atrial natriuretic factor: response to cardiac operation
Division of Cardiovascular & Thoracic Surgery, Montreal General Hospital, Quebec, Canada.
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