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Cerebral blood flow rate during cardiopulmonary bypass and optimal cerebral perfusion flow rate during separated brain perfusion--a clinical study
Authors:T Hirotani
Abstract:There is no established theory to determine the cerebral blood flow rate (CBF) during not only the standard cardiopulmonary bypass but during the cardiopulmonary bypass with separated brain perfusion. This study was carried out to answer the following questions. (1) what is the relationship during the cardiopulmonary bypass between CBF and systemic flow rate or blood pressure?. (2) what is the optimal flow rate to the innominate artery during the separated brain perfusion? Twenty-one patients were selected for this study, who were operated under the cardiopulmonary bypass with a standard roller pump and a membrane oxygenator under moderate hypothermia (nasopharyngeal temperature of 26-28 degrees C). Systemic flow rate was maintained between 40 and 70 ml/kg/min. CBF before the cardiopulmonary bypass was 30.6 +/- 5.5 ml/100 g brain/min, and increased to 33.8 +/- 8.9 ml/100 g brain/min during the cardiopulmonary bypass. CBF was proportional to systemic flow rate (r = 0.62, p less than 0.01) and showed poor association with blood pressure ranged from 35 to 94 mmHg. As for the relationship between innominate arterial and cerebral blood flow rate, CBF linearly followed the decrease of innominate arterial flow rate to below about 9 ml/kg/min, but showed almost no changes when innominate arterial flow rate was over 9 ml/kg/min. It was observed that cerebral oxygen consumption did not decrease significantly under moderate hypothermia (26-28 degrees C), as far as CBF of 25 ml/100 g brain/min was maintained. Based on the relationship between innominate arterial and cerebral blood flow rate, it was shown that the innominate arterial flow rate to provide CBF of 25 ml/100 g brain/min was 5.5 ml/kg/min.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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