Wikstrand Victoria, Linder Nadja, Engström Karl Gunnar
Heart Centre, Cardiothoracic Division, Department of Surgical and Perioperative Sciences, Northern University Hospital, Umeå, Sweden.
J Extra Corpor Technol. 2008 Sep;40(3):175-83.
Pericardial suction blood (PSB) is known to be contaminated with fat droplets, which may cause embolic brain damage during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). This study aimed to investigate the possibility to detect fat emboli by a Doppler technique. An in vitro flow model was designed, with a main pump, a filter, a reservoir, and an injector. A Hatteland Doppler probe was attached to the circulation loop to monitor particle counts and their size distribution. Suspended soya oil or heat-extracted human wound fat was analyzed in the model. The concentrations of these fat emboli were calibrated to simulate clinical conditions with either a continuous return of PSB to the systemic circulation or when PSB was collected for rapid infusion at CPB weaning. For validation purpose, air and solid emboli were also analyzed. Digital image analysis was performed to characterize the nature of the tested emboli. With soya suspension, there was an apparent dose response between Doppler counts and the nominal fat concentration. This pattern was seen for computed Doppler output (p = .037) but not for Doppler raw counts (p = .434). No correlation was seen when human fat suspensions were tested. Conversely, the image analysis showed an obvious relationship between microscopy particle count and the nominal fat concentration (p < .001). However, the scatter plot between image analysis counting and Doppler recordings showed a random distribution (p = .873). It was evident that the Doppler heavily underestimated the true number of injected fat emboli. When the image analysis data were subdivided into diameter intervals, it was discovered that the few large-size droplets accounted for a majority of total fat volume compared with the numerous small-size particles (< 10 microm). Our findings strongly suggest that the echogenecity of fat droplets is insufficient for detection by means of the tested Doppler method.
心包吸引血(PSB)已知会被脂肪滴污染,这可能在体外循环(CPB)期间导致栓塞性脑损伤。本研究旨在探讨通过多普勒技术检测脂肪栓子的可能性。设计了一个体外流动模型,包括一个主泵、一个过滤器、一个储液器和一个注射器。将Hatteland多普勒探头连接到循环回路,以监测颗粒计数及其大小分布。在模型中分析了悬浮的大豆油或热提取的人伤口脂肪。校准这些脂肪栓子的浓度,以模拟PSB持续回流至体循环的临床情况,或在CPB撤机时收集PSB进行快速输注的情况。为了验证目的,还分析了空气栓子和固体栓子。进行数字图像分析以表征测试栓子的性质。对于大豆悬浮液,多普勒计数与标称脂肪浓度之间存在明显的剂量反应。这种模式在计算的多普勒输出中可见(p = 0.037),但在多普勒原始计数中未见(p = 0.434)。测试人脂肪悬浮液时未发现相关性。相反,图像分析显示显微镜颗粒计数与标称脂肪浓度之间存在明显关系(p < 0.001)。然而,图像分析计数与多普勒记录之间的散点图显示为随机分布(p = 0.873)。很明显,多普勒严重低估了注入的脂肪栓子的真实数量。当将图像分析数据细分为直径区间时,发现与众多小尺寸颗粒(< 10微米)相比,少数大尺寸液滴占总脂肪体积的大部分。我们的研究结果强烈表明,脂肪滴的回声性不足以通过测试的多普勒方法进行检测。