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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Regional blood flow and distribution of cardiac output (CO) were evaluated by the radioactive microsphere technique in rhesus monkeys during surface rewarming following the induction of deep hypothermia (20 degrees C.) under deep ether anesthesia. A comparison of animals subjected to 30 minutes of circulatory arrest and those not arrested revealed cerebral, coronary, and renal vascular resistance and flow patterns consistent with a hyperemic response to circulatory arrest at 20 degrees C. Throughout rewarming cerebral and coronary absolute flows tended to be at or above the flows noted at comparable cooling temperatures in a previous study. Renal flow fraction (% Qt) were well preserved during rewarming to 30 degrees C., but a decrease was observed thereafter. Carcass (muscle, skin, bone) %Qt was also reduced following rewarming, especially in arrested animals. CO appeared to be similar to those noted at comparable cooling temperatures until 30 degrees C. during rewarming; thereafter, CO did not fully recover to awake control levels. These data suggest that regional flow is redistributed from the carcass and renal circulations to cerebral and coronary circulations in response to hemodynamic alterations during surface rewarming. It was concluded that autoregulative responses to both circulatory arrest and hemodynamic factors are elicited during surface rewarming from deep hypothermia to 20 degrees C. with the method described.
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PMID:Effects of circulatory arrest and rewarming on regional blood flow during surface-induced hypothermia. 677 2

A combination of increased perioperative morbidity, together with the technical difficulty of an R 0 (curative) resection, is responsible for the poor prognostic factors of supradiaphragmatically extending renal tumors. Six patients aged 53-70 years with vena cava thrombosis extending into the right atrium or ventricle underwent en bloc resection of the primary tumor and tumor thrombus removal. If the atrial tumor mass was large or extended into the ventricle, resection was performed during cardiopulmonary arrest using a cardiopulmonary bypass method with the patient in deep hypothermia (< 18 degrees C). Alternatively if the cardiac tumor infiltration was minimal, resection was performed during an optionally short cardiopulmonary arrest period using a cardiopulmonary bypass method with the patient in hypothermia (23 degrees C). The operative procedure was determined by intracardiac tumor extension, tumor wall adhesions and tumor wall infiltrations, all of which were assessed intraoperatively by vena cava sonography. Six patients were strongly symptomatic preoperatively. Three developed sudden life-threatening cardiopulmonary insufficiency, possibly due to longer-lasting tricuspital valve prolapse with a consecutive right-to-left shunt through a newly reopened foramen ovale. One patient died 14 months postoperatively because of multiple metastases (hepatic, pulmonary and bone). One patient is still alive and has had a local recurrence for 2 months, which was diagnosed 65 months postoperatively. The remaining four patients are alive and well. They have been tumor-free for extended periods of time (29, 34, 62 and 84 months, respectively).
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PMID:[Interdisciplinary surgical therapy of renal tumors with intracardiac tumor thrombi]. 865 Aug 44