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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (
flushing
)
6,387
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A group of 176 patients undergoing cardiac surgery utilizing a technique of rapid core hypothermic cardioplegia with a hyperosmotic solution is presented. A cold, 2 to 4 degrees C hyperosmotic (396 mOsm) perfusate, injected under pressure, induced cardiac arrest without fibrillation within 2 to 4 seconds in every instance. At the end of each procedure,
flushing
of the cold solution out of the coronary system re-establishes spontaneous normal sinus cardiac rhythm in 96% (119 of 124) of coronary surgical procedures, 69% (11 of 16) of aortic valve replacements, 62% (10 of 16) of mitral valve replacements, 55% (five of nine) of aortic valve replacements combined with multiple coronary grafting, 57% (four of seven) of mitral valve replacement combined with multiple coronary grafting, and in 50% (two of four) of double valve replacements. Combined core and topical hypothermia with ice slush used in valve replacements and combined valve with coronary operations allowed periods of total
ischemia
up to 134 minutes without signs of detectable myocardial damage.
...
PMID:Cardioplegia without fibrillation or defibrillation in cardiac surgery. 30 Sep 6
Cold nonperfusional (
flushing
and ice storage) with Collins or Sacks solution and perfusional preservation with cryoprecipitated plasma or albumin were compared in dog kidneys. All these methods were effective in achieving excellent 48-hour preservation of fresh kidneys. After exposure to 20 minutes of
ischemia
at 37 C, neither of the
flushing
solutions yielded kidneys that permitted survival of recipients after 48 hours of preservation, and flushed kidneys functioned poorly after 24 hours of preservation. In contrast, both plasma- and albumin-perfused kidneys exposed to
ischemia
supported life satisfactorily and with normal function. Therefore, simple and inexpensive
flushing
and ice storage techniques are entirely satisfactorily for the preservation of ideally harvested cadaver kidneys, while the more complex and expensive perfusional techniques must be employed in preserving
ischemia
-damaged organs.
...
PMID:Forty-eight-hour kidney preservation. A comparison of flushing and ice storage with perfusion. 76 32
Bilateral cervical autotransplantation of canine kidneys is described for comparative study of renal preservation techniques. Data are obtained from kidneys preserved by (1) initial intravascular
flushing
with modified Collins' C3 solution (Ursol) followed by cold storage, and (2) pulsatile perfusion (MOX 100). Preharvest condition of the donor and
ischemia
times are identical, thus eliminating major sources of potential data variation. Renal function studies performed at periodic intervals demonstrated better initial function for machine preservation but no difference after one to two-month period.
...
PMID:Bilateral cervical transplantation of canine kidneys for study of canine renal preservation. 79 40
Subepicardial transmembrane potentials were recorded from intact pig hearts to observe the changes induced by acute
ischemia
.
Ischemia
shortened action potential duration, and decreased its amplitude, upstroke velocity, and resting potential. The cells were unresponsive after 12 to 15 minutes of coronary artery occlusion, yet near normal action potentials could be restored by
flushing
the occluded artery with saline as late as 40 minutes after occlusion. The unipolar extracellular electrogram reflected unresponsiveness by a monophasic potential. Local refractory periods initially shortened by up to 100 msec. Later, postrepolarization refractoriness occurred and refractory periods lengthened often in excess of basic cycle length, thus resulting in 2:1 responses. The onset of early ventricular arrhythmias often coincided with a period of alternation and 2:1 responses, especially when these got out of phase in different regions. Reperfusion frequently led to ventricular fibrillation, and was associated with marked inhomogeneity in cellular responses. Re-entry within ischemic myocardium was the most likely mechanism for arrhythmias.
...
PMID:The effect of acute coronary artery occlusion on subepicardial transmembrane potentials in the intact porcine heart. 87 13
Arterial emboli were extracted from 79 patients between 1955 and 1963 with polyethylene catheter suction systems and/or retrograde
flushing
and from 149 patients between 1963 and 1973 with Fogarty catheters. The Fogarty-era patients were older, had a greater incidence of ischemic heart disease, and presented with a greater degree of preoperative peripheral
ischemia
. The limb salvage rate of 87 percent after Fogarty catheter embolectomy was not statistically different from the salvage rate of 79 percent after suction catheter embolectomy, but the number of limbs with distal pulses postoperatively was significantly greater after Fogarty treatment, 64 vs. 42 percent. Delay in treatment and the presence of prior occlusive vascular disease adversely affected results in both eras. The in-hospital embolic recurrences occurred in 9 percent of the patients anticoagulated postoperatively and in 31 percent of those not anticoagulated. Heparin and warfarin were equally effective in preventing recurrences, but wound complications were seen in 33 percent of the heparinized patients, compared with 7 percent of those receiving warfarin and 4 percent of those not anticoagulated.
...
PMID:Arterial embolectomy before and after the Fogarty catheter. 110 16
In unilateral nephrectomized beagle dogs the remaining kidney was subjected to 2 hrs of
ischemia
in situ. The ischemic organ was cooled to 22--23 degrees C by initial hypothermic perfusion over a 5-F catheter introduced into the renal artery via the carotid artery. It was then left in the open abdominal wound without any further attempts of cooling. Three perfusates were used: an isoosmolar Dextran solution (Eisenberger), a hyperosmolar, "intracellular" electrolyte solution (Sacks), and a hyperosmolar, "extracellular" electrolyte solution. There was a mean postoperative increase in serum creatinine levels of 0.6 mg-%. By the 3rd p.o. day at latest the serum creatinine was again within normal limits. The inulin and PAH clearances on the 7th and 14th p.o. day showed no significant differences to preoperative determinations. No definite advantage or disadvantage was noted among the three perfusates. All control dogs whose kidneys were made ischemic for 2 hrs without perfusion died due to acute tubular necrosis. Apparently the homogenous cooling and
flushing
by the initial perfusion is of more importance for good preservation in this situation than the composition of the perfusate.
...
PMID:[Short time in-situ preservation of the ischemic kidney by a simple initial hypothermic perfusion with various cold solutions. An animal experimental study]. 115 70
Intraarterial access is used to provide continuous monitoring of systemic arterial blood pressure and to provide access to sample arterial blood. The use of chronic indwelling arterial catheters became commonplace in the 1970s and was rapidly adapted to the care of infants and children. The placement of intraarterial catheters can be technically challenging for even the most experienced surgeon, especially in small infants. Arterial catheters can directly injure vessels, resulting in thrombosis or occlusion. Distal embolization or
ischemia
can also occur. Catheter
flushing
may cause retrograde flow with the potential for embolization at remote sites. Local insertion site complications, such as hematoma, hemorrhage, and infection, can occur. Arterial catheters can also be a source of systemic sepsis. Although the risks and complication rates are low, the potential for devastating injury exists and deserves the greatest respect whenever placement of an arterial catheter is contemplated.
...
PMID:Arterial access in infants and children. 134 85
This study compared the function of reduced grafts prepared in situ or ex vivo and transplanted immediately or after 4 hr of cold storage. Measurements of acid/base balance, plasma electrolytes, albumin, and urea showed no differences between groups. There was no difference between the increase and decline of plasma AST in recipients of grafts transplanted immediately after either ex vivo or in situ reduction; the increase in plasma AST of recipients of stored grafts was up to 10-fold and persisted until the end of the study at 7 days, with some decline. Plasma fibrinogen decreased intraoperatively but levels were restored within 24 hr in all groups; plasma prothrombin and partial thromboplastin times were not significantly disturbed. The patterns of decline and return of tissue adenine nucleotides were similar in all groups. While the regenerative response measured by tissue thymidine kinase and mitotic figures was not different between the groups, comparison with results from a group of partially hepatectomized animals showed a 3-4-fold depression in response in reduced liver grafts. The contributions of the effects of
ischemia
,
flushing
, and preservation to the depressed regenerative response of reduced liver grafts need to be determined. The present studies suggest however, that with regard to functional assessment, results are not affected either by ex vivo or in situ reduction of the graft, or by cold storage for 4 hr.
...
PMID:Ex vivo versus in situ resection of segmental liver grafts in pigs--a comparison in immediate and four-hour-stored grafts. 158 63
University of Wisconsin solution is currently recognized as the best solution for long-term organ preservation. It is recommended that UW solution be used as the in situ flush prior to organ explantation. The purpose of our study was to determine if hepatic allograft function was impaired by
flushing
the graft in situ with Euro-Collins and later
flushing
the graft ex vivo with UW solution, prior to cold storage. Fifty-six donors were randomly assigned to either an EC (n = 24) or UW (n = 32) in situ flush. The livers flushed with EC in situ were later flushed with 1 L of UW on the back table and stored in UW solution. Livers flushed with UW in vivo were similarly flushed and stored in UW on the back table. Concerning the donor allograft, there was no statistical difference (P greater than 0.05) between groups in sex, race, blood type, arterial anatomy, age, prothrombin time (PT), partial thromboplastin time (PTT), total bilirubin (TBR), direct bilirubin (DBR), aspartate amino transferase (AST), or alanine amino transferase (ALT). In addition, the recipients were compared for differences in sex, race, blood type, preoperative status, number of rejections, recipient age, length of surgery, and
ischemia
time and patient survival. There was no significant difference between groups (P greater than 0.05). There was no significant difference in patient survival (P = 0.238). Values for TBR, AST, ALT, PT, PTT, and AP were collected immediately preoperatively and postoperatively and on postoperative days 1, 3, 7, 14, and 28. There was no difference between groups in these values (P greater than 0.05). In our study there was no difference between the groups with respect to graft performance. This would justify the use of EC as an in situ flush during solid organ procurement and
flushing
with UW solution on the back table with an estimated savings of $400 to $1200 per procurement.
...
PMID:A prospective randomized trial between Euro-Collins and University of Wisconsin solutions as the initial flush in hepatic allograft procurement. 158 93
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the significance of increased Tl-201 uptake by the lungs after oral dipyridamole testing. In conjunction with myocardial perfusion scintigraphy, intravenous dipyridamole has been recently approved as an alternative to exercise for the evaluation of coronary artery disease in patients who cannot adequately exercise, and it will largely replace oral dipyridamole testing. This study contributes to the understanding of the significance of increased lung thallium uptake during pharmacologic stress testing. Oral dipyridamole, 400 mg, was administered to 192 patients undergoing Tl-201 imaging for clinical indications. Mild adverse effects occurred in 31% of patients (chest pain, nausea, headache, or
flushing
). Dipyridamole had minimal hemodynamic effects. The lung/heart thallium activity ratio was determined in 152 patients. These were subdivided into four groups according to the presence or absence of
ischemia
, transient myocardial perfusion defect, or scar as indicated by a fixed myocardial perfusion defect. In 61 patients without transient myocardial perfusion defect or fixed myocardial perfusion defect (group 1), the lung/heart thallium activity ratio was 0.39 +/- 0.01 (mean +/- SEM). In 31 patients without transient myocardial perfusion defect but with fixed myocardial perfusion defect (group 2), the lung/heart thallium activity ratio was higher, 0.44 +/- 0.02 (P less than 0.05). In 27 patients with transient myocardial perfusion defect but no fixed myocardial perfusion defect (group 3) and in 33 patients with both transient myocardial perfusion defect and fixed myocardial perfusion defect (group 4), the lung/heart thallium activity ratio was 0.51 +/- 0.03 and 0.52 +/- 0.03, respectively, both significantly higher than either group 1 or group 2 (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Significance of increased Tl-201 uptake by the lungs in patients undergoing oral dipyridamole-thallium myocardial imaging. 161 45
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