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Late Postoperative Ventricular Function After Blood and Crystalloid Cardioplegia

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Journal Circulation
Date 1986 Nov 1
PMID 3490334
Citations 2
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Abstract

Although blood cardioplegia preserves perioperative ventricular function better than crystalloid cardioplegia, late results are uncertain. Nuclear ventriculograms were used to assess ventricular function in 47 patients undergoing coronary bypass surgery who were randomly assigned to receive blood (23 patients) or crystalloid cardioplegia (24 patients). Data were acquired at rest and during maximal exercise (bicycle ergometer) 1 month before surgery (PRE), 5 months after surgery (POST), and perioperatively at rest 3 to 5 hr after operation (PERI). Perioperatively, blood cardioplegia decreased ischemic injury (less elevation in creatine kinase-MB fraction and aspartate aminotransferase; p less than .05), preserved ventricular performance (lower stroke work index at higher left ventricular end-diastolic volume index after crystalloid than blood cardioplegia; p = .02 by analysis of covariance [ANOCOVA]) and preserved systolic function (higher left ventricular end-systolic volume index [LVESVI] at similar systolic blood pressure after crystalloid than blood cardioplegia; p = .02 by ANOCOVA). Postoperatively, resting ventricular performance and systolic function were not different with blood and crystalloid cardioplegia and were similar to preoperative measurements. Postoperatively, the response to exercise was similar between the two groups and was improved compared with that at PRE. Postoperative systolic function at exercise was similar between the two groups but was better than that at PRE (higher systolic blood pressure at similar LVESVI; p = .01 by ANOCOVA). The type of cardioplegic solution influenced perioperative but not late postoperative function after elective coronary artery bypass surgery.

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