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1.
Typically, the standard practice for measuring the arterial blood carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is to take intermittent blood samples for analysis by a bench blood gas analyzer. Continuous inline blood gas monitors are available but are expensive. A potential solution is the capnograph, which was evaluated by determining how accurately the carbon dioxide tension in the oxygenator exhaust gases (PECO2) predicts PaCO2. A standard capnograph monitoring line was attached to the exhaust port of the membrane oxygenator. During CPB, the capnograph reading and arterial blood temperature were recorded at the same time as routine arterial blood gases were taken. One hundred fifty-seven blood samples were collected from 78 patients. A good correlation was found between the PECO2 and the temperature corrected PaCO2 (r2 = 0.833, P < .001). There was also a reasonable degree of agreement between the PECO2 and the temperature corrected PaCO2 during all phases of CPB: accuracy (bias or mean difference between PaCO2 and PECO2) of -1.2 mmHg; precision (95% limits of agreement) of +/- 4.7 mmHg. These results suggest that oxygenator exhaust capnography may be a simple and inexpensive adjunct to the bench blood gas analyzer in continuously estimating PaCO2 of a clinically useful degree of accuracy during CPB.  相似文献   

2.
During cardiopulmonary bypass the partial pressure of carbon dioxide in oxygenator arterial blood (P(a)CO2) can be estimated from the partial pressure of gas exhausting from the oxygenator (P(E)CO2). Our hypothesis is that P(E)CO2 may be used to estimate P(a)CO2 with limits of agreement within 7 mmHg above and below the bias. (This is the reported relationship between arterial and end-tidal carbon dioxide during positive pressure ventilation in supine patients.) During hypothermic (28-32 degrees C) cardiopulmonary bypass using a Terumo Capiox SX membrane oxygenator, 80 oxygenator arterial blood samples were collected from 32 patients during cooling, stable hypothermia, and rewarming as per our usual clinical care. The P(a)CO2 of oxygenator arterial blood at actual patient blood temperature was estimated by temperature correction of the oxygenator arterial blood sample measured in the laboratory at 37 degrees C. P(E)CO2 was measured by connecting a capnograph end-to-side to the oxygenator exhaust outlet. We used an alpha-stat approach to cardiopulmonary bypass management. The mean difference between P(E)CO2 and P(a)CO2 was 0.6 mmHg, with limits of agreement (+/-2 SD) between -5 to +6 mmHg. P(E)CO2 tended to underestimate P(a)CO2 at low arterial temperatures, and overestimate at high arterial temperatures. We have demonstrated that P(E)CO2 can be used to estimate P(a)CO2 during hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass using a Terumo Capiox SX oxygenator with a degree of accuracy similar to that associated with the use of end-tidal carbon dioxide measurement during positive pressure ventilation in anaesthetized, supine patients.  相似文献   

3.
Continuous monitoring and control of arterial carbon dioxide tension (P(a)CO2) during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is essential. A reliable, accurate, and inexpensive system is not currently available. This study was undertaken to assess whether the continuous monitoring of oxygenator exhaust carbon dioxide tension (PexCO2) can be used to reflect P(a)CO2 during CPB. A total of 33 patients undergoing CPB for cardiac surgery were included in the study. During normothermia (37 degrees C) and stable hypothermia (31 degrees C), the values of PexCO2 from the oxygenator exhaust outlet were monitored and compared simultaneously with the P(a)CO2 values. Regression and agreement analysis were performed between PexCO2 and temperature corrected-P(a)CO2 and temperature uncorrected-P(a)CO2. At normothermia, a significant correlation was obtained between PexCO2 and P(a)CO2 (r = 0.79; p < 0.05); there was also a strong agreement between PexCO2 and P(a)CO2 with a gradient of 3.4 +/- 1.9 mmHg. During stable hypothermia, a significant correlation was obtained between PexCO2 and the temperature corrected-P(a)CO2 (r = 0.78; p < 0.05); also, there was a strong agreement between PexCO2 and temperature corrected-P(a)CO2 with a gradient of 2.8 +/- 2.0 mmHg. During stable hypothermia, a significant correlation was obtained between PexCO2 and the temperature uncorrected-P(a)CO2 (r = 0.61; p < 0.05); however, there was a poor agreement between PexCO2 and the temperature uncorrected-P(a)CO2 with a gradient of 13.2 +/- 3.8 mmHg. Oxygenator exhaust capnography could be used as a mean for continuously monitoring P(a)CO2 during normothermic phase of cardiopulmonary bypass as well as the temperature-corrected P(a)CO2 during the stable hypothermic phase of CPB.  相似文献   

4.
We have studied the relationship between the partial pressure of carbon dioxide in oxygenator exhaust gas (PECO2) and arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) during hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass with non- pulsatile flow and a membrane oxygenator. A total of 172 paired measurements were made in 32 patients, 5 min after starting cardiopulmonary bypass and then at 15-min intervals. Additional measurements were made at 34 degrees C during rewarming. The degree of agreement between paired measurements (PaCO2 and PECO2) at each time was calculated. Mean difference (d) was 0.9 kPa (SD 0.99 kPa). Results were analysed further during stable hypothermia (n = 30, d = 1.88, SD = 0.69), rewarming at 34 degrees C (n = 22, d = 0, SD = 0.84), rewarming at normothermia (n = 48, d = 0.15, SD = 0.69) and with (n = 78, d = 0.62, SD = 0.99) or without (n = 91, d = 1.07, SD = 0.9) carbon dioxide being added to the oxygenator gas. The difference between the two measurements varied in relation to nasopharyngeal temperature if PaCO2 was not corrected for temperature (r2 = 0.343, P = < 0.001). However, if PaCO2 was corrected for temperature, the difference between PaCO2 and PECO2 was not related to temperature, and there was no relationship with either pump blood flow or oxygenator gas flow. We found that measurement of carbon dioxide partial pressure in exhaust gases from a membrane oxygenator during cardiopulmonary bypass was not a useful method for estimating PaCO2.   相似文献   

5.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between arterial carbon dioxide (PaCO(2)) and mean expired pump CO(2) during cardiopulmonary bypass (PeCPBCO(2)) in patients undergoing cardiac surgery with CPB during steady state, cooling, and rewarming phases of CPB. DESIGN: Consenting patients, prospective study. SETTING: University-affiliated hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-nine patients. INTERVENTIONS: Patients aged 22 to 81 years were enrolled. An alpha-stat acid-base regimen was performed during CPB. The PeCPBCO(2) was measured by an infrared multigas analyzer with the sampling line connected to the scavenging port of the oxygenator. Values for PaCPBCO(2) from the arterial outflow to the patient and PeCPBCO(2) during CPB at various oxygenator arterial temperatures were collected and compared. Data were analyzed by analysis of variance with 1-way repeated measures and post hoc pair-wise Tukey testing when appropriate. The differences between PaCPBCO(2) and PeCPBCO(2) were linearly regressed against temperature. A p value <0.05 was considered significant. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Three to 5 data sets during CPB were collected from each patient. The mean gradient between PaCPBCO(2) and PeCPBCO(2) was positive 12.4 +/- 10.0 mmHg during the cooling phase and negative 9.3 +/- 9.9 mmHg during the rewarming phase, respectively. On regression of the data, the difference between PaCPBCO(2) and PeCPBCO(2) shows a good correlation with the change in temperature (r(2) = 0.79). The arterial CO(2) +/- x mmHg can be predicted by the formula PaCPBCO(2) = (-2.17x + 69.2) + PeCPBCO(2), where x is temperature in degrees C. CONCLUSIONS: Monitoring the mean expired CO(2) value from the CPB oxygenator exhaust scavenging port with a capnography monitor provides a continuous and noninvasive data source to aid in sweep flow CPB circuit management during CPB.  相似文献   

6.
An in vivo study was undertaken during hypothermic (28 degrees C) cardiopulmonary bypass to compare oxygenator exhaust capnography as a means of estimating arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) with bench blood gas analysis. A total of 123 pairs of measurements were made in 40 patients. Oxygenator exhaust capnographic measurements systematically underestimated PaCO2 measured by a bench blood gas analyzer. During the cooling and stable hypothermic phases of cardiopulmonary bypass, the relationship was reasonably accurate, but became far more variable during rewarming. Oxygenator exhaust capnography could be used as an inexpensive means of continuously monitoring PaCO2 during the cooling and stable hypothermic phases of cardiopulmonary bypass but should not be used during rewarming.  相似文献   

7.
Although several short communications have appeared describing attempts to record the concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the unintubated airway by a catheter placed in the nose, so far only few reports have documented the reliability of the method. To evaluate the reliability of CO2 measurements by a catheter in the open, unintubated airway during spontaneous respiration, a 12 CH PVC catheter was forwarded through the nostril to the hypopharynx and connected to a capnograph in nine healthy volunteers. Another capnograph was connected to a tightly fitting face mask and simultaneous CO2 recordings were attained from the two parts of the airway during normoventilation, hyperventilation and rebreathing. A corresponding blood sample was drawn from the radial artery for blood gas analysis. The configurations of the capnograms recorded from the pharyngeal catheter were similar to those recorded from the face mask. The results were analysed by a multifactor analysis of variance. The carbon dioxide tension ( p CO2) was significantly influenced by degree of ventilation ( P <0.0001), subject ( P <0.0001), measurement site ( P =0.030) and interaction subject-ventilation ( P =0.015). In spite of the significant influence of the measurement site, the difference between end tidal carbon dioxide tension ( P CO2(ET)) and carbon dioxide tension in arterial blood ( P CO2(a)) was small. The mean differences between paired measurements ( p CO2(ET)- p CO2(a)) were -0.10 kPa±0.41 kPa (mean±SD) for the catheter and -0.20 kPa ±0.43 kPa for the face mask. The study demonstrates that reliable recordings of CO2 concentrations during spontaneous respiration can be obtained by a thin catheter positioned in the hypopharynx.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: The quantitative contribution of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) to respiratory dysfunction after cardiac surgery is not documented and the effect of the use of bilateral internal mammary artery (IMA) grafts is not clear. METHODS: One hundred and seventy-five patients undergoing CABG with (CPB, n=150) and without (NOCPB, n=25) CPB were studied. PMN elastase (as a marker of the systemic inflammatory response) and serial arterial oxygen (paO(2)) and carbon dioxide (paCO(2)) tension, alveolar arterial oxygen (AaO(2)) gradient and percent saturation were measured. The CPB group was subdivided into three groups by the number of IMA grafts used: 0IMA (n=12), 1IMA (n=82) and 2IMA (n=51). RESULTS: The NOCPB group was younger, had significantly better preoperative blood gases, received fewer grafts and had lower PMN elastase levels than the CPB group. In both groups maximum respiratory dysfunction occurred at 48 h (paO(2), percentage saturation and Aa gradient all P<0.001 versus baseline) with partial recovery by 5 days. The percentage decline and subsequent recovery in all blood gas parameters was near identical in the CPB and NOCPB groups. Amongst the three IMA groups the percentage changes in all blood gas parameters were similar, as was the duration of postoperative ventilation and time to discharge. There was no correlation between blood gas parameters at 48 h with age, CPB time, blood loss, duration of ventilation or peak PMN elastase level. CONCLUSIONS: Changes in postoperative gas exchange are similar in patients undergoing CABG with and without CPB even although PMN elastase levels indicate that CPB produces a more marked inflammatory response. The use of 2IMA compared with 1IMA does not increase respiratory dysfunction.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate preoperative clinical conditions and/or intraoperative physiologic variables related to jugular venous oxygen saturation (SjO2) during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). DESIGN: Prospective study. SETTING: General hospital, single institution. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred forty patients (52 women, 88 men) who underwent coronary artery bypass grafting. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: The authors measured SjO2 at five times during surgery. Multiple stepwise regression analysis showed a significant correlation of SjO2 with (1) arterial carbon dioxide partial pressure (PaCO2) before CPB (standard regression coefficient [(SC)] = 0.435), (2) cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) during initiation of CPB (SC = 0.259), (3) PaCO2, tympanic temperature (TT), bubble oxygenator, and cerebral small infarctions (CSIs) during hypothermic CPB (SC = 0.507, -0.237, -0.192, and -0.189, respectively), (4) CPP, PaCO2, CSIs, and bubble oxygenator during rewarming (SC = 0.476, 0.294, -0.220, and -0.189, respectively), and (5) PaCO2 after CPB (SC = 0.480; p < 0.01). Correlation coefficients between SjO2 and CPP during rewarming were 0.40 (0.46 without CSI and 0.37 with CSI; p < 0.01). These results indicate that the relationship between CPP and SjO2 was significant in patients with CPP less than 40 mmHg during rewarming. CONCLUSION: During rewarming, when cerebral perfusion and oxygen demand change abruptly, but not during stable hypothermic CPB, CPP was a significant factor related to sjO2.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVE: To describe the washin and washout of desflurane when first administered during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) for cardiac surgery. DESIGN: A single-arm prospective study. SETTING: University-affiliated hospital operating room. PARTICIPANTS: Ten adult patients presenting for cardiac surgery. INTERVENTIONS: Consenting patients presenting for cardiac surgery received anesthesia with midazolam and fentanyl. Patients were cooled to 32 degrees C on CPB, then desflurane 6% was administered and blood samples drawn repeatedly from the arterial and venous bypass cannulae as well as from the membrane oxygenator inlet and exhaust from 2 to 32 minutes of desflurane administration. Just before rewarming, final (maximum) washin samples were taken. On rewarming, desflurane was discontinued, and blood and gas samples were taken 2 to 24 minutes thereafter. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: CPB time was 116 +/- 10 minutes, and ischemic time was 81 +/- 6 minutes. Mean pump flow was 4.49 +/- 0.03 L/min, and mean arterial pressure was 70.1 +/- 1 mmHg during the study period. Arterial washin of desflurane was initially rapid; arterial concentrations reached 50% of administered concentrations within 4 minutes, but then slowed, reaching 68% of inspired concentrations at 32 minutes (desflurane concentration 4.0% +/- 0.3%). Arterial washout of desflurane was more rapid; arterial concentrations fell to 18% of the maximum concentration reached within 4 minutes, and only 8% of the maximum arterial concentration was present in blood 20 minutes later. CONCLUSION: Desflurane showed rapid initial washin and washout on CPB when administration was started at 32 degrees C and stopped at time of rewarming.  相似文献   

11.
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LSC) is being performed increasingly often. The carbon dioxide cavity increases end-expiratory carbon dioxide (exCO2), which can be regulated by mechanical ventilation. Because about 20-40% carbon dioxide remains in the patient at the end of surgery, we were interested in its influence on spontaneous respiration. PATIENTS AND METHODS. Fifteen patients classed as ASA 1-2 and undergoing LSC were compared with 15 patients (also ASA 1-2) undergoing laparotomy for cholecystectomy (LAP). All patients had balanced anaesthesia with fentanyl, enflurane, nitrous oxide and vecuronium. After surgery they were extubated when spontaneous respiration and vigilance were adequate. In the next 3 h we continuously determined exCO2 in the expired air through an intranasal catheter, and oxygen saturation (SAT), respiratory rate (RR) and heart rate (HR) using Oscar (Datex) and Ohmeda (Braun) apparatus while the patients were breathing room air. The blood pressure (BP) was determined intermittently. Postoperative pain treatment was standardized. RESULTS. The groups were reduced comparable with respect of the anthropometric data, because the weight was significantly higher in the LAP group. Fentanyl consumption was also significantly higher in the LAP group, reflecting the more pronounced trauma than with LSC. Mean exCO2 was 46 mmHg after LSC and 36 mmHg after LAP (P less than or equal to 0.05), continuously decreasing in the LSC group and increasing in the LAP group to 40 mmHg after 3 h. Mean RR was 18-20.min-1 after LSC and 12-15.min-1 after LAP during this period (P less than or equal to 0.05). There were no differences in SAT (94-96%), HR (75.min-1) and BP (130/80 mmHg). DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS. The remaining carbon dioxide after LSC has important implications for postoperative spontaneous respiration. Probably due to an activation of carbon dioxide receptors, RR is increased to eliminate residual carbon dioxide. This is confirmed by a significantly increased exCO2 compared with that in the LAP group. This effect lasts at least 3 h, exCO2 being comparable in both groups, but RR is still increased after LSC. This different respiratory pattern does not affect SAT, being normal without hypoxic episodes. Cardiovascular parameters were also normal without group differences. We conclude that the carbon dioxide peritoneal cavity has important consequences for postoperative ventilation. Using our anaesthetic technique and postoperative treatment exCO2 reaches normal values after about 3 h due to an increased RR. If other methods, e.g., stronger opioids, which decrease carbon dioxide response are used, this effect may even be prolonged and more pronounced. We are now performing an investigation to evaluate this effect.  相似文献   

12.
Five patients undergoing extensive cerebral monitoring during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) procedures were subjected to studies on cerebral CO2 reactivity during nonpulsatile CPB. The cerebral monitoring included recording of arterial blood pressure (BP), central venous pressure (CVP), epidural intracranial pressure (EDP), cerebral electrical activity by a cerebral function monitor (CFM), and middle cerebral artery (MCA) flow velocity by transcranial Doppler technique. The cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) was thus continuously recorded (CPP = BP - EDP). During steady-state CPB with constant hematocrit, temperature, and arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2), MCA flow velocity varied with changing CPP in a pressure-passive manner, indicating that the cerebral autoregulation was not operative. During moderately hypothermic (28 to 32 degrees C), nonpulsatile CPB, with steady-state hematocrit, temperature, and pump flow, we deliberately and rapidly changed PaCO2 for periods of 1 or 2 minutes by increasing gas flow to the membrane oxygenator, thereby testing the cerebral CO2 reactivity. Nineteen CO2 reactivity tests, performed at CPP levels ranging from 17 to 75 mm Hg, disclosed that the cerebral CO2 reactivity decreased with CPP, especially with CPP levels below 35 mm Hg. In these patients, concomitant changes in CPP during the CO2 reactivity test could be compensated for by adjusting the observed change in MCA flow velocity. The corrected CO2 reactivity values obtained in this way ranged from below 1.0 (observed at CPP levels below 20 mm Hg) to a 3.0 to 4.5% X mm Hg-1 change in PaCO2 (observed at CPP levels above 35 mm Hg).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
A new monitoring technique, based on optical fluorescence chemistry, allows continuous monitoring of all blood gas variables during cardiopulmonary bypass. To evaluate the clinical performance of this monitor, we drew 220 arterial and 216 venous blood samples from 15 patients, and simultaneous blood gas values displayed by the monitor were compared with standard laboratory measurements. The continuous monitor predicted laboratory values with varying degrees of accuracy. (R2 values by linear regression: arterial oxygen tension 0.86, venous oxygen tension 0.36, arterial carbon dioxide tension 0.58, venous carbon dioxide tension 0.72, arterial pH 0.53, venous pH 0.58; pH 0.53, venous pH 0.58; p less than 0.0001). Monitor values of arterial oxygen tension overestimated laboratory values (bias = + 43.5 mm Hg), but the laboratory reference method likely underestimated true arterial oxygen tension in the high range achieved on bypass. Monitoring of venous oxygen tension was imprecise (precision = +/- 6.51 mmHg), regardless of whether stable conditions existed during the sampling period. Monitoring of carbon dioxide tension and pH showed small bias (carbon dioxide tension within 2 mm Hg, pH within 0.03) and good precision (carbon dioxide tension within 3 mm Hg, pH within 0.03). With the development of unstable conditions on bypass, monitor arterial oxygen tension values showed a changing relationship to corresponding laboratory values. In conclusion, arterial and venous carbon dioxide tension and pH monitoring provide acceptably accurate alternatives to laboratory measurement of these variables during cardiopulmonary bypass. Arterial oxygen tension monitoring accurately indicates changes in oxygen tension in the arterial oxygen tension range typically produced during extracorporeal circulation. Oxygen tension monitoring in the venous oxygen tension range is too imprecise for clinical decision-making purposes.  相似文献   

14.
Cerebral blood flow (CBF) measurements and blood gas analyses were performed on anaesthetized and artifically ventilated dogs during arterial hypoxia or haemodilution in different ranges of arterial carbon dioxide tension. Arterial hypoxia as well as haemodilution produced a flow increase in all ranges of ventilation. However, this flow increase was elicited at a cerebrovenous oxygen tension which rose with the arterial carbon dioxide tension, but which tended to be maintained by the flow increase during continued decrease of the arterial oxygen content. On the assumption that the cerebrovenous oxygen tension reflects the oxygen tension of the brain tissue, it is suggested that the arterial carbon dioxide tension influences the ability of the brain tissue to maintain the aerobic metabolism during reduced tissue oxygen tension. This means that tissue hypoxia, in the sense of utilisation of anaerobic metabolism, occurs at a tissue oxygen tension which is lower the lower the arterial carbon dioxide tension is.  相似文献   

15.
This study evaluates the usefulness of the analysis of gas sampled from the exhaust port of a membrane oxygenator in the estimation of anaesthetic tension in arterial blood. Sixty-seven arterial blood samples were drawn from patients undergoing hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass with anaesthesia maintained by either isoflurane or desflurane. Anaesthetic tensions in the oxygenator exhaust gas were measured using an infrared analyser and in arterial blood using a two-stage headspace technique with a gas chromatograph. Both measurement systems were calibrated with the same standard gas mixtures. There was no difference in anaesthetic tension measured in arterial blood and gas leaving the oxygenator exhaust (isoflurane: n = 29, range: 0.3-0.8%, 95% limits of agreement: -0.08% to 0.09%; desflurane: n = 38, range: 1.5-5.4%; 95% limits of agreement -0.65% to 0.58%). We conclude that anaesthetic tensions in arterial blood can be accurately monitored by analysis of the gas emerging from the exhaust port of a membrane oxygenator.  相似文献   

16.
We investigated the effects of arterial carbon dioxide tension on the myocardial tissue oxygen tensions of subepicardium and subendocardium in the anesthetized dogs. The study was done in fourteen open-chest mongrel dogs, weighing 13 +/- 1 kg, anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (30 mg.kg-1 iv), and mechanically ventilated with 100% oxygen to maintain normocapnia. End tidal CO2 fraction (FECO2) was monitored continuously by capnograph. Regional myocardial tissue PO2 was measured using a monopolar polarographic needle electrode. Two pairs of combined needle sensors were carefully inserted, one in the epicardial and the other in the endocardial layer of the beating heart. Electromagnetic blood flow probe was applied on the left anterior descending artery (LAD). After a stable normocapnic ventilation, hypocapnia was induced by increasing the respiratory rate, and this mechanical hyperventilation was kept fixed throughout the experiments. To induce hypercapnia, exogenous carbon dioxide was added to the inspired gas step-wise until FECO2 reached 10%. Hypocapnic hyperventilation (PaCO2: 22 mmHg) invariably resulted in a significant reduction of coronary blood flow (LADBF) and left ventricular myocardial tissue PO2 in both epicardial and endocardial layers, while addition of carbon dioxide to the inspired gas (hypercapnic hyperventilation) reversed the change by increased LADBF and arterial PaCO2 in a dose-dependent manner. These results indicate that injudicious and severe hypocapnic hyperventilation may induce impaired myocardial tissue perfusion and oxygenation although normal cardiac output and arterial blood oxygenation are maintained.  相似文献   

17.
This study compares the gas transfer capacity, the blood trauma, and the blood path resistance of the hollow-fiber membrane oxygenator Dideco D 903 with a surface area of 1.7 m2 (oxygenator 1.7) versus a prototype built on the same principles but with a surface area of 2 m2 (oxygenator 2). Six calves (mean body weight: 68.2 +/- 3.2 kg) were connected to cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) by jugular venous and carotid arterial cannulation, with a mean flow rate of 4 l/min for 6 h. They were randomly assigned to oxygenator 1.7 (N = 3) or 2 (N = 3). After 7 days, the animals were sacrificed. A standard battery of blood samples was taken before the bypass, throughout the bypass, and 24 h, 48 h, and 7 days after the bypass. The oxygenator 2 group showed significantly better total oxygen and carbon dioxide transfer values throughout the perfusion (p < .001 for both comparison). Hemolytic parameters (lactate dehydrogenase and free plasma hemoglobin) exhibited a slight but significant increase after 5 h of bypass in the oxygenator 1.7 group. The pressure drop through the oxygenator was low in both groups (range, 43-74 mmHg). With this type of hollow-fiber membrane oxygenator, an increased surface of gas exchange from 1.7 m2 to 2 m2 improves gas transfer, with a limited impact on blood trauma and no increase of blood path resistance.  相似文献   

18.
Moderate hypothermia (32-33 degrees C) occurs in anesthetic practice. However, intrapulmonary gas exchange and the effect of temperature correction of blood gases on oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange have not been investigated in these patients. We investigated alveolar-arterial difference in oxygen tension (AaDO2) and arterial to end-tidal difference in carbon dioxide (Pa-ETCO2) during rewarming of eight ASA physical status I patients from hypothermia of 32 degrees C. Anesthesia was maintained with fentanyl/propofol. AaDO2 and Pa-ETCO2 were assessed by analyzing arterial blood gases and saturated water vapor pressure, uncorrected or corrected to actual body temperature. The respiratory quotient (RQ) was measured by calorimetry. After temperature correction of blood gases and water vapor pressure, the AaDO2 was significantly higher at 33 and 32 degrees C compared with 36 degrees C (56 +/- 13 and 64 +/- 14 vs 39 +/- 10 mm Hg; P < 0.05 and P < 0.01). The deterioration of pulmonary oxygen exchange was not detected if arterial blood gases and water vapor pressure were not corrected. The RQ did not change during moderate hypothermia compared with 36 +/-C. The temperature-corrected Pa-ETCO2 was not affected by hypothermia. We conclude that AaDO2 is increased during moderate hypothermia. This is only detected when water vapor pressure and arterial blood gases are corrected to actual body temperature. IMPLICATIONS: We investigated intrapulmonary oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange during moderate hypothermia (32 degrees C) in eight patients. If oxygen, carbon dioxide, and water vapor pressure were corrected to actual body temperature, the alveolar-arterial oxygen tension difference was increased during hypothermia. The carbon dioxide tension difference and the respiratory quotient were unaffected by hypothermia.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: We evaluated the newly introduced Bioline heparin coating and tested the hypothesis that surface heparinization limited to the oxygenator and the arterial filter will ameliorate systemic inflammation and preserve platelets during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). METHODS: In a prospective double-blind study, 159 patients underwent coronary revascularization using closed-system CPB with systemic heparinization, mild hypothermia (33 degrees C), a hollow-fiber oxygenator, and an arterial filter. The patients were randomly divided in three groups. In group A (controls, n = 51), surface heparinization was not used. In group B (n = 52), the extracorporeal circuits were totally surface-heparinized with Bioline coating. In group C (n = 56), surface heparinization was limited to oxygenator and arterial filter. RESULTS: No significant difference was noted in patient characteristics and operative data between groups. Operative (30-day) mortality was zero. Platelet counts dropped by 12.3% of pre-CPB value among controls at 15 minutes of CPB, but were preserved in groups B and C throughout perfusion (p = 0.0127). Platelet factor 4, plasmin-antiplasmin levels, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha increased more in controls during CPB than in groups B or C (p = 0.0443, p = 0.0238 and p = 0.0154 respectively). Beta-thromboglobulin, fibrinopeptide-A, prothrombin fragments 1 + 2, factor XIIa levels, bleeding times, blood loss, and transfusion requirements were similar between groups. Intensive care unit stay was shorter in groups B and C than in controls (p = 0.037). CONCLUSIONS: Surface heparinization with Bioline coating preserves platelets, ameliorates the inflammatory response and is associated with a reduced fibrinolytic activity during CPB. Surface heparinization limited to the oxygenator and the arterial filter had similar results as totally surface-heparinized circuits.  相似文献   

20.
Background: There is controversy about whether capnography is adequate to monitor pulmonary ventilation to reduce the risk of significant respiratory acidosis in pregnant patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery. In this prospective study, changes in arterial to end-tidal carbon dioxide pressure difference (PaCO2--PetCO2), induced by carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum, were determined in pregnant patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy.

Methods: Eight pregnant women underwent general anesthesia at 17-30 weeks of gestation. Carbon dioxide pnueumoperitoneum was initiated after obtaining arterial blood for gas analysis. Pulmonary ventilation was adjusted to maintain PetCO2 around 32 mmHg during the procedure. Arterial blood gas analysis was performed during insufflation, after the termination of insufflation, after extubation, and in the postoperative period.

Results: The mean +/- SD for PaCO2--PetCO2 was 2.4 +/- 1.5 before carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum, 2.6 +/- 1.2 during, and 1.9 +/- 1.4 mmHg after termination of pneumoperitoneum. PaCO2 and p H during pneumoperitoneum were 35 +/- 1.7 mmHg and 7.41 +/- 0.02, respectively. There were no significant differences in either mean PaCO2--PetCO2 or PaCO2 and p H during various phases of laparoscopy.  相似文献   


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