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Title: Intermittent antegrade tepid versus cold blood cardioplegia in elective myocardial revascularization. Author: Fiore AC, Swartz MT, Nevett R, Vieth PJ, Magrath RA, Sherrick A, Barner HB. Journal: Ann Thorac Surg; 1998 Jun; 65(6):1559-64; discussion 1564-5. PubMed ID: 9647058. Abstract: BACKGROUND: The ideal temperature for blood cardioplegia administration remains controversial. METHODS: Fifty-two patients who required elective myocardial revascularization were prospectively randomized to receive intermittent antegrade tepid (29 degrees C; group T, 25 patients) or cold (4 degrees C; group C, 27 patients) blood cardioplegia. RESULTS: The two cohorts were similar with respect to all preoperative and intraoperative variables. The mean septal temperature was higher in group T (T, 29.6 degrees +/- 1.1 degrees C versus 17.5 degrees +/- 3.0 degrees C; p < 0.0001). After reperfusion, group T exhibited significantly greater lactate and acid release despite similar levels of oxygen extraction (p < 0.05). The creatine kinase-MB isoenzyme release was significantly lower in group T (764 +/- 89 versus 1,120 +/- 141 U x h/L; p < 0.04). Hearts protected with tepid cardioplegia demonstrated significantly increased ejection fraction with volume loading, improvement in left ventricular function at 12 hours, and decreased need for postoperative inotropic support (p < 0.05). The frequency of ventricular defibrillation after cross-clamp removal was lower in this cohort (p < 0.05). There were no hospital deaths, and both groups had similar postoperative courses. CONCLUSIONS: Intermittent antegrade tepid blood cardioplegia is a safe and efficacious method of myocardial protection and demonstrates advantages when compared with cold blood cardioplegia in elective myocardial revascularization.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]