Effects of tracheal extubation on coronary blood flow,myocardial metabolism and systemic haemodynamic responses |
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Authors: | Steven Elia Peter Liu Carol Chrusciel Alan Hilgenberg Charrisios Skourtis Demetrios Lappas |
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Affiliation: | 1. Departments of Anesthesia and Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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Abstract: | Global coronary blood flow and metabolism were measured in seven patients on the first postoperative day following coronary revascularization to test the hypothesis that tracheal extubation produces adverse haemodynamic responses akin to those observed during tracheal intubation. Regional coronary flow and metabolic measurements were made in five of the seven patients. Extubation from a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) of 5 cm H2O was associated with a statistically significant rise in cardiac index from 3.44 ± 0.23 L · min-1 · m-2 to 3.73 ± 0.15L·min-1 ·m-2 related to an increase in stroke index, without significant changes in heart rate, mean arterial and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure. Consequently the changes in myocardial oxygen consumption (8.52 ± 0.55 to 8.85 ± 0.93 ml · min-1) and coronary blood flow (172 ± 18 to 179 ± 17 ml·min-1) were less prominent than those reported during intubation, where substantial rises in myocardial oxygen consumption and coronary flow occurred. Two patients experienced cardiac lactate production but there were no changes in systemic or coronary haemodynamics, nor were there clinical or electrocardiographic signs of ischaemia. We conclude that extubation does not appear to be associated with adverse systemic or coronary haemodynamic responses in patients following coronary bypass grafting. However, the revascularized myocardium may remain vulnerable to anaerobic metabolism in the immediate postoperative period. Pour savoir si comme ľintubation, ľextubation de la trachée provoque des perturbations hémodynamiques, on a mesuré le métabolisme et la circulation coronarienne globale chez sept patients, au lendemain ďun pontage aorto-coronarien. On a aussi calculé les valeurs régionales de ces mêmes variables pour cinq ďentre eux. Ľindex cardiaque de 3.44 ± 0.23 L · min-1 · m-2 sous pression positive en respiration spontanée (CPAP) de 5 cm. H2O s’est élevé à 3.73 ± 0.15 L · min-1 · m-2 post-extubation avec une augmentation significative du volume ďéjection. La fréquence cardiaque et les pressions artérielles moyennes et capillaires pulmonaires n’ont pas changé. Ainsi ľaugmentation de la consommation ďoxygène du myocarde de 8.52 ± 0.55 à 8.85 ± 0.93 ml · min-1 et celle du flot coronarien de 172 ± 18 à 179 ± 17 ml · min-1 ont été moindres que celles, importantes, déjà observées lors de ľintubation. On a noté chez deux patients une production de lactate par le myocarde, sans changement de ľhémodynamic systémique et coronarienne non plus que de signe clinique ou électrocardiographique ďischémie. Donc, après un pontage coronarien, ľextubation ne semble pas causer ďeffet néfaste sur les circulations systémique et coronarienne, toutefois, le myocarde revascularisé peut demeurer sensible au métabolisme anaérobique. |
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Keywords: | anaesthetic techniques extubation heart metabolism blood flow myocardial intubation complications measurement techniques cardiac output haemodynamics pulmonary arterial systemic arterial |
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