Allen Bradley S
Department of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery, The University of Texas at Houston, Memorial Hermann Children's Hospital, Houston, TX, USA.
Semin Thorac Cardiovasc Surg Pediatr Card Surg Annu. 2004;7:141-54. doi: 10.1053/j.pcsu.2004.02.001.
This article describes the experimental infrastructure and subsequent successful clinical application of a comprehensive cardioplegic strategy that limits intraoperative injury and improves postoperative outcomes in pediatric patients. The infant heart is at high risk of damage from poor protection as a result of preoperative hypertrophy, cyanosis, and ischemia. These factors may also make the immature (pediatric) heart more sensitive to cardioplegic arrest compared with the mature (adult) heart. The preoperative factors of cyanosis and pressure volume overload are discussed, followed by the infrastructure of the strategies of warm induction and reperfusion with substrate enhancements, multidose cardioplegia, and a "modified" integrated approach to allow ischemia only when visualization is needed in pediatric surgeries. The importance of using a blood cardioplegia solution, with reduced calcium, increased magnesium, and low perfusion pressure are also shown. A practical clinical framework based on these experimentally proven principles is then presented to allow the surgeon to apply these strategies clinically. The results of using these principles are depicted in a series of 567 patients, including 93 patients with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. Applications of these concepts should improve the safety of protection of the infant heart and reduce postoperative morbidity and mortality.