Abstract
Volatile agents can mimic ischaemic preconditioning leading to a decrease in myocardial infarct size. The present study investigated if a 15 min sevoflurane administration before cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) has a cardioprotective effect in patients undergoing coronary surgery. Seventy-two patients were randomized in two centres. The intervention group (S) received 1 MAC sevoflurane administrated via the ventilator for 15 min followed by a 15 min washout before CPB, the control group did not. The primary outcome was the postoperative troponin Ic peak. A biopsy of the atrium was taken during canulation for enzyme dosages. Results are expressed as mean (SD). Neither troponin Ic nor tissular enzyme measurement exhibited any difference between the groups: peak of troponin Ic was 4.4 (5.6) in S group vs 5.2 (6.6) ng ml(-1) in control group (ns). Intratissular ecto-5'-nucleotidase activity was 7.1 (4.3) vs 8.5 (11.9), protein kinase C activity was 27.1 (15.7) vs 29.2 (28.7), tyrosine kinase activity was 101 (54.1) vs 98.5 (63.3), and P38 MAPKinase activity was 131.1 (76.1) vs 127.1 (86.8) nmol mg protein(-1) min(-1) in S group and control group, respectively (ns). However there were fewer patients with low postoperative cardiac index in S group (11% in S vs 35% in control group, P < 0.05) when considering the per protocol population. In S group, 25% of patients required an inotropic support during the postoperative period, vs 36% of patients in control group (ns). This study did not show a significant preconditioning signal after 15 min of sevoflurane administration. The 15 min duration might be too short or the concentration of sevoflurane too low to induce cardioprotection detected by troponin I levels.
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