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Alexander A Albert
Wael M Hassanein
Ulrich P Rosendahl
Petra Gehle
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Asian Cardiovasc Thorac Ann 2004;12:115-120
© 2004 Asia Publishing EXchange Ltd


ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION

Hyperkalemic Blood versus Crystalloid Cardioplegia in Longer Clamping Times

Alexander A Albert, MD, Bert Arnrich, MS1, Jörg A Walter, MD1, Wael M Hassanein, MD, Ulrich P Rosendahl, MD, Petra Gehle, MD, Frank Schön2, Jürgen Ennker, PhD

Clinic for Cardiothoracic Surgery
2 Department of Perfusion, Heart Institute Lahr/Baden, Germany
1 Institute of Neuroinformatics, University of Bielefeld, Germany

For reprint information contact: Alexander A Albert, MD Tel: 49 7821 925 226 Fax: 49 7821 925 253 Email: alexander.albert{at}heart-lahr.com Heart Institute Lahr/Baden, Hohbergweg 2, 77933 Lahr, Germany.

The 715 patients who had crystalloid cardioplegia were compared with 5419 who had cold hyperkalemic blood cardioplegia for isolated coronary artery grafting from 1996 through 2001. Creatine kinase-MB was measured preoperatively, at 90 min, and 7 hours after the end of extracorporeal circulation. Correlation of post-bypass creatine kinase-MB release with aortic crossclamp time and other variables in the two cardioplegia groups was made using dichotomous encoding of cardioplegia in a multivariate linear regression model. Creatine kinase-MB levels 90 min after bypass were higher in patients who had crystalloid cardioplegia than in those who had blood cardioplegia. There was a linear relationship between aortic crossclamp time and post-bypass creatine kinase-MB release in both cardioplegia groups. Post-bypass creatine kinase-MB release increased with aortic crossclamp time independently of other factors and significantly more with crystalloid cardioplegia than with blood cardioplegia (the slope of the regression line was 0.230 versus 0.106). Intraaortic balloon pumping was used less frequently in the blood cardioplegia group. There was an advantage with blood cardioplegia for myocardial protection in longer aortic crossclamp times for isolated coronary bypass grafting.







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