Affiliation: | (1) Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Fukuoka Childrens Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan;(2) Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan;(3) Present address: Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Aso-Iizuka Hospital, 3-83 Yoshio-cho, Iizuka, 820-8505, Japan |
Abstract: | In neonate open-heart surgery, cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) with extreme hemodilution induces an increased capillary permeability and accumulation of extravascular fluid, resulting in organ dysfunction. We evaluated the effects of a reduced priming volume for CPB and dilutional ultrafiltration (DUF) during neonatal open-heart surgery. Nineteen consecutive neonates with complete transposition of the great arteries who underwent an arterial switch operation were retrospectively assigned into two groups: the high-priming-volume circuit group (group A, n = 9) and the low-priming-volume circuit group (group B, n = 10). Patients in group B underwent surgery with a miniaturized CPB circuit and using the DUF technique. The priming volume of group B was nearly two-thirds that of group A. The water balance value after CPB and surgery was significantly lower in group B (–126 ± 118ml, –116 ± 116ml) than in group A (88 ± 218ml, 83 ± 165ml). Systolic blood pressure just after CPB was higher in group B (67.9 ± 9.1mmHg) than in group A (55.4 ± 10.3mmHg). Postoperative ventilatory support was shorter in group B (45 ± 19h) than in group A (68 ± 27h). In neonatal cardiac surgery, low-priming-volume CPB circuits and DUF improve the water balance during surgery and may attenuate any inflammatory reaction, which would help preserve postoperative organ function. |