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Asian Cardiovasc Thorac Ann 2005;13:255-260
© 2005 Asia Publishing EXchange Ltd


ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION

Mixed Venous-Arterial CO2 Tension Gradient after Cardiopulmonary Bypass

Yoshiyuki Takami, MD, Hiroshi Masumoto, MD

Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kasugai Municipal Hospital, Kasugai, Japan

For reprint information contact: Yoshiyuki Takami, MD Tel: 81 568 570 057 Fax: 81 568 570 067 Email: cvs{at}hospital.kasugai.aichi.jp, Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kasugai Municipal Hospital, 1-1-1 Takagi-cho, Kasugai City 486-8510, Japan.

Significant venous hypercarbia has been reported in septic shock and circulatory failure. Cardiopulmonary bypass also impairs systemic and pulmonary blood perfusion. The objective of this study was to determine the clinical significance of the increased venous-arterial CO2 tension gradient resulting from venous hypercarbia after cardiopulmonary bypass. On arrival in the intensive care unit, venous and arterial CO2 tensions were measured in the radial and pulmonary arteries in 140 consecutive patients who had undergone coronary (n = 79), valve (n = 34), aortic (n = 20), and other (n = 7) surgery under cardiopulmonary bypass. The mean venous-arterial CO2 tension gradient was 5.0 ± 3.3 mm Hg (range, 7.7 to 15.7 mm Hg). By linear regression analysis, the factors that significantly correlated with venous-arterial CO2 tension gradient were bypass duration, aortic crossclamp time, initial arterial lactate level, transpulmonary arteriovenous lactate difference, arterial bicarbonate level, base excess, cardiac index, mixed venous O2 saturation, O2 delivery, O2 consumption, and the peak value of creatine kinase. The venous-arterial CO2 tension gradient may reflect impaired perfusion and anaerobic metabolism induced by cardiopulmonary bypass and could be a simple and useful indicator for patient management after surgery under cardiopulmonary bypass.







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