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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1994;107:116-125
© 1994 Mosby, Inc.
SURGERY FOR CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE |
Boston, Mass.
Boston, Mass.
From the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Children's Hospital of Boston, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Address for reprints: Frank L. Hanley, MD, Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, University of California at San Francisco, 505 Parnassus Ave., San Francisco, CA 94143.
Abstract
Surgical treatment of certain congenital heart lesions in utero may have a therapeutic advantage over postnatal repair or palliation. For fetal heart surgery to be possible, a method to support the fetal circulation is necessary. Early experimental attempts at fetal cardiac bypass were unsuccessful because of increased placental vascular resistance during and after fetal cardiac bypass, which led to decreased placental flow, fetal asphyxia, and death. Our laboratory has demonstrated that the administration of indomethacin (a cyclooxygenase inhibitor) during fetal cardiac bypass prevents this increase in placental vascular resistance during and after fetal cardiac bypass. The specific mechanism by which indomethacin achieves this effect is likely to be either by inhibiting the production of a placental vasoconstrictive prostaglandin or by diverting substrate from the cyclooxygenase pathway to the lipoxygenase pathway, thereby potentially increasing the production of a placental vasodilating leukotriene. To examine these potential mechanisms in more detail, we inhibited both prostaglandin and leukotriene synthesis at the phospholipase stage with high-dose steroids. Fourteen fetal lambs were used in the study. Six animals received indomethacin (3 mg/kg), four received high-dose steroids (Solu-Medrol 50 mg/kg), and four animals were used as controls. Observations were made during a 1-hour prebypass period, a 30-minute bypass period, and a 2-hour postbypass period. Placental blood flow and placental vascular resistance were calculated at four times during the experiments: before sternotomy; after sternotomy; during bypass at 30 minutes; and 30 minutes after cessation of bypass. Similar to indomethacin, high-dose steroid administration during fetal cardiac bypass prevents the rise in placental vascular resistance and preserves placental blood flow during and after fetal cardiac bypass. This study suggests that the production of a placental vasoconstrictive prostaglandin is responsible for the increase in placental vascular resistance and decrease in placental blood flow observed after fetal cardiac bypass. (J THORAC CARDIOVASC SURG 1994;107:116-25)
The correction of certain congenital heart defects in utero may be more beneficial than postnatal therapy. We have been interested in developing an extracorporeal cardiac bypass method that may be used during in utero fetal cardiac surgery. Early attempts at cardiac bypass in the fetal lamb were unsuccessful because placental vascular resistance increased and placental blood flow decreased during and after fetal extracorporeal support.
1-3 This led to fetal asphyxia and death soon after the fetuses were weaned from cardiac bypass.
1-3 We have shown that, with the administration of indomethacin, this rise in placental vascular resistance and decrease in placental blood flow is avoided, and placental blood flow and placental respiratory gas exchange is maintained during and after fetal extracorporeal support.
4
Indomethacin inhibits the enzyme cyclooxygenase, which converts arachidonic acid into a peroxy-acid, the precursor of all prostaglandins. Many prostaglandins are known potent placental vasoconstrictors. By inhibiting this cyclooxygenase, indomethacin not only inhibits all prostaglandin synthesis, but may also increase leukotriene production by diverting arachidonic acid from the cyclooxygenase pathway to the lipoxygenase pathway, thereby increasing synthesis of leukotrienes. We therefore theorized that indomethacin may prevent the increase in placental vascular resistance during fetal cardiac bypass either by preventing the synthesis of a placental vasoconstricting prostaglandin or by increasing the synthesis of a placental vasodilating leukotriene.
To test this theory and evaluate which of these potential mechanisms is more likely to be responsible for preventing the increase in placental vascular resistance observed during fetal cardiac bypass, we inhibited both leukotriene and prostaglandin production at the phospholipase stage with high-dose methylprednisolone sodium succinate (Solu-Medrol). A positive response with methylprednisolone would support the theory that indomethacin exerts its action through the arachidonic acid pathway and would also clarify the details of the mechanism.
The fetal lambs were divided into three groups and placed on fetal cardiac bypass. Experiments were performed with a standardized fetal lamb cardiac bypass preparation. Six fetal lambs received indomethacin and four received methylprednisolone before fetal cardiac bypass. Four fetal lambs were used as controls and did not receive any drug. Fetal hemodynamics, arterial blood gases, placental blood flow, cardiac output, and placental vascular resistance were determined and compared among the three groups.
METHODS
Anesthetic management
Fourteen pregnant ewes of 110 to 120 days gestation were fasted for 24 to 48 hours. Anesthesia was induced with ketamine 30 to 40 mg/kg intramuscularly. The ewes were intubated endotracheally and their lungs were ventilated with 100% oxygen to keep their arterial oxygen saturation at 99% and their arterial carbon dioxide tension (PCO2) in the physiologic range during pregnancy of 25 to 35 torr.
5 Anesthesia was maintained with intravenous ketamine at 300 to 500 mg/hr. A Foley catheter was placed and urine output was monitored. A femoral arterial line was placed, and maternal heart rate and blood pressure were monitored.
Procedure
The uterus was exposed through a midline laparotomy. A uterine vein was identified and cannulated. Oxygen tension (PO2) of the uterine vein was checked every 15 to 30 minutes to monitor uterine perfusion, and aggressive fluid replacement was performed to prevent maternal dehydration and subsequent hypoperfusion of the uterus. Intravenous fluid was administered liberally to keep the ewe's hematocrit value below 25% and uterine vein PO2 above 45 mm Hg.
A 2 to 3 cm hysterotomy was made over a fetal hind limb, and the fetal hind limb was removed from the uterus. An intramuscular injection of ketamine, 50 mg/kg, was given to the fetal lamb. A hind limb artery and vein were cannulated. The venous catheter was used to inject radioactive microspheres, and the arterial line was used to monitor fetal heart rate, blood pressure, hematocrit value, and arterial blood gases and to be used as a withdrawal catheter during microsphere injections. The hind limb was returned to the uterus, and the hysterotomy was closed.
An 8 to 10 cm second hysterotomy was performed to expose the fetal sternum, neck, and fore limb. A fore limb vein and artery were cannulated. The arterial line was used as a withdrawal catheter during microsphere injections, and the venous line was used to administer nitroprusside (Nipride) during cardiac bypass.
A fetal neck incision exposed a carotid artery, and the carotid artery was cannulated toward the heart with a No. 8, 10, or 12 arterial perfusion cannula. A midline sternotomy was performed, the pericardium was opened, and pericardial retention sutures were placed. A pulmonary arterial line was placed in the right ventricular outflow tract and advanced through the pulmonary valve into the main pulmonary artery. This line was used to monitor pulmonary artery pressures and as a withdrawal catheter during microsphere injections. The right atrial appendage was cannulated with a No. 14 or 16 venous cannula, and the fetus was supported by normothermic nonpulsatile cardiac bypass for 30 minutes. In four experiments, methylprednisolone (50 mg/kg) was given to both the ewe and fetus before bypass. In six experiments indomethacin was administered to the fetal lambs as previously described,
4 and in four experiments no drug was given.
One to 2 hours after cessation of fetal cardiac bypass, the ewe and fetus were killed and the fetus and placenta were removed from the uterus. The locations of all the fetal withdrawal catheters were confirmed and the fetal organs were dissected and removed.
All animals received humane care in compliance with the "Principles of Laboratory Animal Care" formulated by the National Society for Medical Research and the "Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals prepared by the National Academy of Sciences and published by the National Institutes of Health. The experimental protocol was reviewed and approved by the Children's Hospital of Boston Committee on the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.
Fetal cardiac bypass
A Bio-Medicus centrifugal conical pump (Medtronic Bio-Medicus, Eden Prairie, Minn.), primed with either maternal or donor sheep blood, was used as the pumping device during cardiac bypass. Because the circuit contained no oxygenator, the placenta was the sole gas exchanger during bypass. Flows were adjusted to approximate a normal fetal cardiac output of approximately 400 ml/min per kilogram of fetal weight. After a 30-minute cardiac bypass period, the fetus was weaned from cardiac bypass, and the venous cannula was removed. During bypass, nitroprusside was administered (10 to 20 µg/kg per minute) to keep fetal blood pressure in the same range as prebypass levels. Nitroprusside was usually needed in the group administered indomethacin, never needed in the fetuses that received methylprednisolone, and always needed in the control experiments.
Data accumulation
Maternal and fetal heart rate and blood pressure were continuously monitored with Statham transducers (Viggo Spectramed Inc., Critical Care Div., Oxnard, Calif.) and either a Hewlett-Packard 7758B system (Hewlett-Packard Co., Palo Alto, Calif.) or Honeywell AR-6 Simultrace recorder (Honeywell, Inc., Minneapolis, Minn.). Both maternal and fetal PO2, PCO2, pH, bicarbonate radical (HCO3), and hematocrit value and maternal uterine vein PO2 were checked every 15 to 30 minutes on a Ciba-Corning 280 blood gas system (Ciba-Corning Diagnostics Corp., Medfield, Mass.) before, during, and for 1 to 2 hours after fetal cardiac bypass.
Radioactive microspheres were used to determine fetal cardiac output, placental blood flow, and individual organ blood flows at four times during each procedure: before sternotomy, after sternotomy, during cardiac bypass, and 30 minutes after cessation of cardiac bypass. During the bypass microsphere injection, the heart was electrically fibrillated for a brief period. Microspheres were injected to ensure at least 400 microspheres per organ counted.
6 The triple withdrawal catheter method was used to determine cardiac output and individual organ blood flows, and blood was withdrawn at a rate of 4 ml/min per catheter.
6, 7
The fetal organs and placenta were dissolved overnight in a solution of 2N potassium hydroxide in 100% methanol at 60° C. Individual organ and placental radioactivity was counted in an LKB Wallac 1282 gamma counter (Wallac, Inc., Gaithersburg, Md.) with the aid of a Dell System 200 computer (Dell Computer Corp., Austin, Tex.). Cardiac output and placental blood flow were calculated as previously described.
7 Placental vascular resistance was calculated by dividing mean arterial blood pressure by placental blood flow.
Statistical methods
Statistical analyses were performed with a statistical program (Statworks, Cricket Software; Computer Associates, Mt. Laurel, N.J.). Student's unpaired t test was used, and statistical significance was declared at p values less than 0.05.
RESULTS
Hemodynamics
Maternal and fetal heart rate and blood pressure were in the normal range in all three groups.
5, 8-14 Maternal heart rates were between 70 and 90 beats/min and mean blood pressures were between 80 and 100 mm Hg throughout the procedures. Fetal heart rates were between 144 and 180 beats/min and mean blood pressures were between 40 and 55 mm Hg during the experiments. In the control group and usually in the indomethacin-treated group, fetal blood pressure would increase during cardiac bypass, and nitroprusside was administered intravenously to decrease mean fetal blood pressure to prebypass levels. In the methylprednisolone-treated fetuses nitroprusside was not necessary, because the arterial blood pressure did not rise when cardiac bypass was begun.
Arterial blood gases
The fetal prebypass values for pH, arterial PCO2, PO2, and HCO3 were the same in all three groups (
Table I and Figs. 1 to 4). These values are in the normal range for fetal lambs.
5, 8-14
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Cardiac output, placental blood flow, and resistance
Similarly, the prebypass values for placental blood flow, placental vascular resistance, cardiac output, and percentage of cardiac output as placental blood flow were the same in all three groups (
Table II and Figs. 5 to 8). These values are in the normal range for fetal lambs.
5, 8-14 There was a 30% decrease in placental blood flow and cardiac output after fetal sternotomy before fetal cardiac bypass. This 30% decrease in cardiac output and placental blood flow has been previously reported.
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DISCUSSION
Intrauterine surgical therapy for certain forms of complex congenital heart lesions may have advantages over present day postnatal repair or palliation. The types of lesions that may benefit from this approach are those complex lesions that develop over time throughout fetal life as a result of abnormal fetal intracardiac pressures or flow patterns.
15 These lesions have their origins early in fetal life as relatively simple primary obstructive defects; however, the abnormal flow patterns set up by these simple obstructive lesions result in progressive abnormal development of major cardiac structures, such as the heart chambers and great vessels.
15 Surgically correcting the simple primary obstructive lesions in the fetal heart in utero will serve two purposes. First, it will normalize flow patterns in the abnormally developing fetal heart; second, it will provide a period of time in utero (i.e., the remainder of gestation) during which the fetal heart may recover and resume normal development.
15 For fetal heart surgery to be possible, a method of performing fetal cardiac bypass will be necessary. Previous experiments with standard cardiac bypass methods have demonstrated placental dysfunction after fetal cardiac bypass.
1-3 The inciting factor causing increased placental vascular resistance and placental dysfunction has remained unknown. We
4 have previously shown that the administration of indomethacin, a prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor, during fetal cardiac bypass prevents the placental dysfunction normally observed after fetal cardiac bypass.
Indomethacin prevents the synthesis of all prostaglandins by inhibiting the formation of a peroxy-acid from arachidonic acid. In addition to blocking prostaglandin synthesis, indomethacin treatment might lead to an increase in leukotriene synthesis by providing more arachidonic acid that may be available to the lipoxygenase pathway. We therefore postulated that indomethacin was preventing the normally observed placental dysfunction during fetal cardiac bypass either by inhibiting the formation of a placental vasoconstrictive prostaglandin or by increasing the synthesis of a placental vasodilating leukotriene. To determine which of these mechanisms was correct and to test the general theory that indomethacin exerts its effect through the arachidonic cascade, we inhibited the release of arachidonic acid from membrane phospholipids with high-dose methylprednisolone. Arachidonic acid is the precursor of both prostaglandins and leukotrienes, and administering methylprednisolone during fetal cardiac bypass would inhibit both pathways. If the mechanism of action of indomethacin is the inhibition of the synthesis of a vasoconstrictive prostaglandin during fetal cardiac bypass, administration of methylprednisolone would exert a similar effect. If the mechanism of action of indomethacin is increased substrate presentation to the leukotriene pathway, administration of methylprednisolone would not prevent the normally observed placental dysfunction during and after fetal cardiac bypass.
Our experiments demonstrate that the use of methylprednisolone during fetal cardiac bypass prevents the increase in placental vascular resistance and preserves placental blood flow and placental respiratory gas exchange after fetal cardiac bypass. These findings suggest that both methylprednisolone and indomethacin prevent placental dysfunction during and after fetal cardiac bypass by inhibiting the production of a vasoconstrictive prostaglandin.
The prostaglandins thromboxane and prostaglandin E2 are both known to be potent placental vasoconstrictors.
16-25 Fetal prostaglandin E2 serum levels have been shown to be elevated during and for several days after fetal intervention.
18, 25 Prostaglandin E2 serum levels have also been observed to rise in the fetal lamb just before birth.
18, 25 From these observations, prostaglandin E2 synthesis seems to occur at times of fetal stress. Fetal cardiac bypass may be a significant enough stress to the fetus to cause an increase in prostaglandin E2 levels and placental vasoconstriction.
Thromboxane production has been observed to increase in both pediatric and adult patients supported by cardiac bypass.
26-30 Fetal cardiac bypass may result in increased production of thromboxane in the fetus, resulting in placental vasoconstriction.
CONCLUSION
Vasoconstrictive prostaglandins are responsible for the increased placental vascular resistance and decreased placenta blood flow observed during and after fetal cardiac bypass. Further studies designed specifically to examine the roles of prostaglandin E2 and thromboxane are being planned.
Appendix: DISCUSSION
Dr. Pierantionio Russo (Philadelphia, Pa.)
We, at Temple University, have been interested in this type of work for some time. We too have been searching for factors affecting placental and umbilical blood flow during and after cardiopulmonary bypass in the fetal lamb model. However, our circuit differs slightly from the one described by the authors, because we have used a membrane oxygenator to control arterial blood gases and acid-base homeostasis. We think that this is particularly important if one wants to simulate clinical cardiopulmonary bypass by cooling and rewarming the fetus. We concur with the authors that during cardiopulmonary bypass placental blood flow decreases because of increased resistance. In the instrumented fetal lamb with transonic flow probes positioned around the isolated umbilical arteries, we have found that during simulated cardiopulmonary bypass, umbilical blood flow can be manipulated by changing the temperature of the prime and by use of
-adrenergic blockers. In particular, at constant pressure and flow in the descending aorta, umbilical blood flow is minimal at 20° C, but it returns to baseline during rewarming of the fetus to 39° C.
I have two questions for the authors. First, did you return any of these fetuses back into the uterus after successful use of indomethacin and steroids? We have been recently approaching the problem of fetal survival after cardiopulmonary bypass by delivering the fetuses and then maintaining them on liquid ventilation. Second, do you think that indomethacin, although preserving placental blood flow, may actually interfere with fetal survival by inducing premature closure of the ductus arteriosus?
Dr. Sabik
Thank you, Dr. Russo, for your comments. We did not place an oxygenator in our bypass circuit because it would not have allowed us to evaluate how well the fetal placenta was functioning during fetal bypass by measuring fetal arterial blood gases. If we had added an oxygenator to the circuit, while the fetuses were on bypass the fetal arterial blood gas measurements would have represented how well the oxygenator was functioning, and not the placenta.
Regarding temperature, we have performed isolated placental studies with varying perfusion temperatures, and we have found higher placental vascular resistances with hypothermic placental bypass than with normothermic placental bypass. However, we determined that this increased placental vascular resistance during hypothermic bypass was due solely to the increased viscosity of blood at the lower temperatures.
To answer your question about long-term studies, if we use indomethacin alone during fetal cardiac bypass, the fetuses will survive for 6 hours after being weaned from bypass. They die of a delayed placental dysfunction that is due to increased placental vascular resistance. It appears that indomethacin is able to block this response of increased placental vascular resistance for only a short period of time. However, if during fetal bypass we administer indomethacin with a fetal anesthetic that is able to prevent what we term "the fetal stress response to surgery," these fetuses survive to complete gestation. These studies are currently under investigation.
In an earlier article, we addressed the question of the effect of indomethacin on the ductus. Using a pulmonary arterial line in the main pulmonary artery and a femoral arterial line, we did not observe any pressure gradients across the ductus after administration of indomethacin.
Footnotes
Read at the Seventy-second Annual Meeting of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery, Los Angeles, Calif., April 26-29, 1992. ![]()
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