Effects of Prolonged Serum Calcium Suppression during Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in Pigs

Author:

Pooth Jan-Steffen1ORCID,Liu Yechi2,Petzold Ralf1,Scherer Christian2,Benning Leo1ORCID,Kreibich Maximilian2,Czerny Martin2,Beyersdorf Friedhelm2,Benk Christoph2,Trummer Georg2,Brixius Sam Joé2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University Medical Centre Freiburg, University of Freiburg, 79106 Freiburg, Germany

2. Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, University Medical Centre Freiburg, University of Freiburg, 79106 Freiburg, Germany

Abstract

Controlled reperfusion by monitoring the blood pressure, blood flow, and specific blood parameters during extracorporeal reperfusion after cardiac arrest has the potential to limit ischemia–reperfusion injury. The intracellular calcium overload as part of the ischemia–reperfusion injury provides the possibility for the injury to be counteracted by the early suppression of serum calcium with the aim of improving survival and the neurological outcome. We investigated the effects of prolonged serum calcium suppression via sodium citrate during extracorporeal resuscitation using the CARL protocol (CARL—controlled automated reperfusion of the whole body) compared to a single-dose approach in a porcine model after prolonged cardiac arrest. A control group (N = 10) was resuscitated after a 20 min cardiac arrest, initially lowering the intravascular calcium with the help of a single dose of sodium citrate as part of the priming solution. Animals in the intervention group (N = 13) received additional sodium citrate for the first 15 min of reperfusion. In the control group, 9/10 (90.0%) animals survived until day 7 and 7/13 (53.8%) survived in the intervention group (p = 0.09). A favorable neurological outcome on day 7 after the cardiac arrest was observed in all the surviving animals using a species-specific neurological deficit score. The coronary perfusion pressure was significantly lower with a tendency towards more cardiac arrhythmias in the intervention group. In conclusion, a prolonged reduction in serum calcium levels over the first 15 min of reperfusion after prolonged cardiac arrest tended to be unfavorable regarding survival and hemodynamic variables compared to a single-dose approach in this animal model.

Funder

Resuscitec GmbH, Germany

Open Access Publication Fund of the University of Freiburg

Berta–Ottenstein-Programme for (Advanced) Clinician Scientists, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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