Author:
Hindman Bradley J.,Dexter Franklin,Smith Tom,Cutkomp Johann
Abstract
Background
Although pulsatile and nonpulsatile cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) do not differentially affect cerebral blood flow (CBF) or metabolism during hypothermia, studies suggest pulsatile CPB may result in greater CBF than nonpulsatile CPB under normothermic conditions. Consequently, nonpulsatile flow may contribute to poorer neurologic outcome observed in some studies of normothermic CPB. This study compared CBF and cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen (CMRO2) between pulsatile and nonpulsatile CPB at 37 degrees C.
Methods
In experiment A, 16 anesthetized New Zealand white rabbits were randomized to one of two pulsatile CPB groups based on pump systolic ejection period (100 and 140 ms, respectively). Each animal was perfused at 37 degrees C for 30 min at each of two pulse rates (150 and 250 pulse/min, respectively). This scheme created four different arterial pressure waveforms. At the end of each perfusion period, arterial pressure waveform, arterial and cerebral venous oxygen content, CBF (microspheres), and CMRO2 (Fick) were measured. In experiment B, 22 rabbits were randomized to pulsatile (100-ms ejection period, 250 pulse/min) or nonpulsatile CPB at 37 degrees C. At 30 and 60 min of CPB, physiologic measurements were made as before.
Results
In experiment A, CBF and CMRO2 were independent of ejection period and pulse rate. Thus, all four waveforms were physiologically equivalent. In experiment B, CBF did not differ between pulsatile and nonpulsatile CPB (72 +/- 6 vs. 77 +/- 9 ml.100 g-1.min-1, respectively (median +/- quartile deviation)). CMRO2 did not differ between pulsatile and nonpulsatile CPB (4.7 +/- 0.5 vs. 4.1 +/- 0.6 ml O2.100 g-1.min-1, respectively) and decreased slightly (0.4 +/- 0.4 ml O2.100 g-1.min-1) between measurements.
Conclusions
During CPB in rabbits at 37 degrees C, neither CBF nor CMRO2 is affected by arterial pulsation. The absence of pulsation per se is not responsible for the small decreases in CMRO2 observed during CPB.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
44 articles.
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