Rimmer Lara, Fok Matthew, Bashir Mohamad
Thoracic Aneurysm Service, Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Aorta (Stamford). 2014 Aug 1;2(4):129-34. doi: 10.12945/j.aorta.2014.13-049. eCollection 2014 Aug.
Depending on the extent of aortic disease and surgical repair required, thoracic aortic surgery often involves periods of reduced cerebral perfusion. Historically, this resulted in detrimental neurological dysfunction, and high risk of mortality and morbidity. Over the last half century, rapid improvements have revolutionized aortic surgery. Among these, deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (DHCA) has drastically reduced the risk of mortality and morbidity following surgery on the thoracic aorta. This progress was facilitated by experimental pioneers such as Bigelow, who studied reduced oxygen expenditure consequent on induction of hypothermia in dogs. These encouraging findings led to trials in human cardiac surgery by Lewis in 1952 and further made possible the first successful aortic arch replacement by Denton Cooley and Michael De Bakey. Modern day surgery has come a long way from the use of immersion of the patient in ice baths and other primitive techniques previously described. This paper explores the development of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest from its origins to the present.
根据主动脉疾病的程度和所需的手术修复情况,胸主动脉手术常常涉及脑灌注减少的时期。从历史上看,这会导致有害的神经功能障碍以及高死亡率和发病率风险。在过去的半个世纪里,快速的进步彻底改变了主动脉手术。其中,深低温停循环(DHCA)极大地降低了胸主动脉手术后的死亡率和发病率风险。这一进展得益于像比奇洛这样的实验先驱,他研究了在狗身上诱导低温后氧消耗减少的情况。这些鼓舞人心的发现促使刘易斯在1952年对人类心脏手术进行了试验,并进一步使丹顿·库利和迈克尔·德贝基首次成功进行主动脉弓置换成为可能。现代手术与之前描述的将患者浸入冰浴及其他原始技术相比已经有了长足的发展。本文探讨了深低温停循环从起源到现在的发展历程。