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Cerebral oxygenation during warming after cardiopulmonary bypass.

作者信息

Sapire K J, Gopinath S P, Farhat G, Thakar D R, Gabrielli A, Jones J W, Robertson C S, Chance B

机构信息

Department of Anesthesiology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030-4298, USA.

出版信息

Crit Care Med. 1997 Oct;25(10):1655-62. doi: 10.1097/00003246-199710000-00014.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

To evaluate jugular venous oxygen saturation (SjVO2), measured with a fiberoptic oximetry catheter, and brain tissue oxygen saturation, measured by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRSO2), as monitors of cerebral oxygenation during cardiopulmonary bypass surgery.

DESIGN

Prospective, clinical study.

SETTING

Operating room of a Veterans Administration Hospital.

PATIENTS

Nineteen patients undergoing moderate hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass surgery.

INTERVENTIONS

SjvO2 and NIRSO2 were monitored in the patients during the surgical procedure.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS

Moderate hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass surgery had two distinct cerebral hemodynamic phases. While the patients were hypothermic, SjvO2 averaged 80 +/- 7% and none of the patients had an increase in cerebral lactate production. During the rewarming period, however, reductions in SjvO2 to < 50% occurred in 16 (84%) patients and increased cerebral anaerobic metabolism developed in 11 (58%) patients. SjvO2 during rewarming was dependent on mean arterial pressure, with 60 mm Hg appearing to be a critical value. Two other factors appeared to also contribute to the jugular desaturation, a low hematocrit and a rapid warming time. The SjvO2 catheter had excellent performance during the surgery. The average difference between paired measurements of SjvO2 by the catheter and in blood samples was -0.4 +/- 4.25%, and the correlation between the two measurements was highly significant (r2 = .93; p < .001). The NIRSO2 trended with the SjvO2 in most patients (r2 = .63; p < .001).

CONCLUSIONS

The study confirms other studies showing that jugular venous desaturation can occur during rewarming after cardiopulmonary bypass surgery. Presently, SjvO2 appears to be a better monitor of cerebral oxygenation than NIRSO2. However, NIRSO2 has promise as a noninvasive monitor of cerebral oxygenation if future developments allow more quantitative measurements of oxygen saturation.

摘要

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