Abstract

This study describes the hemodynamic dose-response characteristics of a titrated, continuous adenosine infusion before and 1 h (anesthetized), 1 week, and 1 year after coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. Average tolerated adenosine infusion rates were less 1 h and 1 week after surgery (128 +/- 23 and 118 +/- 27 microg/kg/min, respectively) than before (156 +/- 29 microg/kg/min) and 1 year after surgery (156 +/- 24 microg/kg/min). Heart rate (HR) increased with a 120-microg/kg/min adenosine infusion rate both preoperatively (21 +/- 11%) and 1 year postoperatively (16 +/- 8%). Systolic blood pressure (BP) decreased 26 +/- 11%, 14 +/- 7%, and 9 +/- 6% with 120 microg/kg/min adenosine for the three postoperative examinations. The integral of the outflow tract velocity with 120 microg/kg/min adenosine increased 49 +/- 22% and 29 +/- 12% after 1 h and 1 week, respectively, whereas its product with HR increased equally for all examinations (40 +/- 22%, 62 +/- 27%, 46 +/- 13%, and 39 +/- 11%). The average preoperative left ventricular area shortening was 45 +/- 10% and neither it nor end-diastolic left ventricular area (preload) changed with surgery, time after surgery, or with adenosine. A titrated adenosine infusion is well suited to patients requiring a pharmacologic provocation to expose reversible myocardial ischemia during the first hours or days after CABG surgery. The anesthetized and anemic patient are particularly unsuited for the commonly used fixed-infusion-rate protocol.

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