Abstract
To facilitate perfusion rewarming without the use of total body heparinization or an oxygenator following open-heart correction with surface hypothermia, we divised a pump circuit. The circuit, totally primed with 100 c.c. of saline, consists of polyurethane-polyvinyl-graphite (PPG) coated Tygon tubes (with one end tapered by heat treatment) and a copper-coil heat exchanger. A roller pump was used to achieve partial bypass from the left atrium to the ascending aorta with flow rates up to 70 c.c. per kilogram per minute. Experiments in dogs resulted in rapid rewarming, immediate return of cardiac function, and hematologic alterations similar to those noted during surface rewarming. The safety of the method was also demonstrated. Prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, and platelet values returned to control levels upon rewarming, and no thromboemboli or bleeding problems were noted. Six clinical experiences were accumulated. Details of the method, hematologic and blood chemical analyses in dogs, and the first clinical trial in a 3-month-old infant with transposition of the great vessels are reported.
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More From: The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
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