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Safety of direct true lumen cannulation after venous exsanguination: a study in a surviving porcine model†
Author(s) -
Caius Mustonen,
Hannu-Pekka Honkanen,
Siri Lehtonen,
Hannu Tuominen,
Tuomas Mäkelä,
Timo Kaakinen,
Fredrik Yannopoulos,
Vesa Anttila,
Tatu Juvonen
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
european journal of cardio-thoracic surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.303
H-Index - 133
eISSN - 1873-734X
pISSN - 1010-7940
DOI - 10.1093/ejcts/ezz047
Subject(s) - medicine , seldinger technique , anesthesia , cardiopulmonary bypass , lumen (anatomy) , enolase , surgery , cardiogenic shock , tamponade , aortic dissection , circulatory system , aorta , cardiology , catheter , myocardial infarction , immunohistochemistry
OBJECTIVES Type A aortic dissection requires immediate surgery. Traditional cannulation methods such as the central aortic cannulation with the Seldinger technique and axillary cannulation are primary choices. Yet in the presence of tamponade or severe cardiogenic shock, these can be too time-consuming to complete. Direct true lumen cannulation after venous exsanguination not only avoids this issue but also leads to transient global ischaemia. We studied the safety of direct true lumen cannulation from the aspect of global ischaemia in a surviving porcine model. METHODS Twelve pigs were randomized to either control or intervention groups (6 + 6). The intervention group underwent simulated direct true lumen cannulation by exsanguination and circulatory arrest for 5 min at 35°C before cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Both groups underwent CPB cooling to 25°C followed by a 25-min arrest period and subsequent warming to 36°C. Neuron-specific enolase levels were measured at 6 time-points from blood samples. Near-infrared spectroscopy was used to determine brain oxygenation. The neurological recovery was evaluated daily during a 7-day follow-up, and the brain was harvested for a histopathological analysis after euthanization. RESULTS All pigs recovered their normal neurological behaviour. The neurobehavioural total score on postoperative day 2 reached borderline statistical significance, thus favouring the intervention group [(9 (8.75–9) vs 6.5 (5.5–9), P = 0.06]. Near-infrared spectroscopy values and neuron-specific enolase levels slightly favoured the control group during the cooling period, but the difference was not clinically significant. The histopathological analysis showed no difference between the groups. CONCLUSIONS A 5-min period of normothermic global ischaemia before CPB does not impair the neurological outcome following hypothermic circulatory arrest in a surviving porcine model.

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