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

We present a case of aortic aneurysm in a four-year-old child complicated with tuberous sclerosis. We used the same general principles as for adult patients and successfully managed our patient. Our methods included the use of isoflurane plus epidural anaesthesia, dopamine to maintain blood pressure, and induced mild hypothermia to reduce brain metabolism and to prevent spinal cord damage during aortic cross-clamping. Intensive monitoring including EEG was beneficial to the anaesthetic management.
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PMID:Aortic aneurysm in a four-year-old child with tuberous sclerosis. 852 13

We have experienced graft replacement of a thoracic aortic aneurysm in a 42-year-old man with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. The patient received graft replacement of the abdominal aortic aneurysm 1 year before this thoracic operation but had no abnormality in his outside appearance. Thoracic CT scan revealed a thoracic aortic aneurysm of 80 mm in maximal diameter. We performed a graft replacement of the thoracic aorta from the ascending aorta to the proximal descending thoracic aorta using deep hypothermia and retrograde cerebral perfusion. The aortic wall was so thin that we used Teflon felt for reinforcement of graft anastomosis at the outside wall of the aortic stump. Type III collagen stain of the resected aortic wall showed deficiency of type III collage, which was consistent with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (type IV). Postoperative course was uneventful, and the patient returned to his ordinary life.
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PMID:[Successful graft replacement of a thoracic aortic aneurysm in a patient with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome]. 852 72

Suspended animation is defined as the therapeutic induction of a state of tolerance to temporary complete systemic ischemia, i.w., protection-preservation of the whole organism during prolonged circulatory arrest ( > or = 1 hr), followed by resuscitation to survival without brain damage. The objectives of suspended animation include: a) helping to save victims of temporarily uncontrollable (internal) traumatic (e.g., combat casualties) or nontraumatic (e.g., ruptured aortic aneurysm) exsanguination, without severe brain trauma, by enabling evacuation and resuscitative surgery during circulatory arrest, followed by delayed resuscitation; b) helping to save some nontraumatic cases of sudden death, seemingly unresuscitable before definite repair; and c) enabling selected (elective) surgical procedures to be performed which are only feasible during a state of no blood flow. In the discussion session, investigators with suspended animation-relevant research interests brainstorm on present knowledge, future research potentials, and the advisability of a major research effort concerning this subject. The following topics are addressed: the epidemiologic facts of sudden death in combat casualties, which require a totally new resuscitative approach; the limits and potentials of reanimation research; complete reversibility of circulatory arrest of 1 hr in dogs under profound hypothermia ( < 10 degrees C), induced and reversed by portable cardiopulmonary bypass; the need for a still elusive pharmacologic or chemical induction of suspended animation in the field; asanguinous profound hypothermic low-flow with cardiopulmonary bypass; electric anesthesia; opiate therapy; lessons learned by hypoxia tolerant vertebrate animals, hibernators, and freeze-tolerant animals (cryobiology); myocardial preservation during open-heart surgery; organ preservation for transplantation; and reperfusion-reoxygenation injury in vital organs, including the roles of nitric oxide and free radicals; and how cells (particularly cerebral neurons) die after transient prolonged ischemia and reperfusion. The majority of authors believe that seeking a breakthrough in suspended animation is not utopian, that ongoing communication between relevant research groups is indicated, and that a coordinated multicenter research effort, basic and applied, on suspended animation is justified.
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PMID:Suspended animation for delayed resuscitation. 860 4

Between April 1987 and March 1995, 198 patients (133 males [67.17%] and 65 female [32.83%]; mean age 63.85 years) underwent descending thoracic aortic aneurysm repair. Of these, 142 patients (71.71%) had symptoms. In most patients (n = 123 [62%]) the aneurysmal disease was extensive, involving at least two thirds of the descending aorta. In 153 patients (77.27%), the repair was completed with the simple clamp technique (mean clamping time 24.6 minutes). Left atrium-to-femoral bypass was used in 26 patients (13.13%) at high risk (mean clamping time 37.4 minutes). Profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest were necessary in 19 patients (9.6%) with extensive aneurysms that involved the arch and ascending aorta (mean circulatory arrest time 46 minutes). Operative mortality was 5.1% (n = 10). The causes of death were cardiac in three patients (1.5%), pulmonary in four (2.0%), and renal in three (1.5%). Postoperative paraplegia occurred in three patients (1.5%). Important predictors (p < 0.05) of mortality at regression analysis included renal failure, pulmonary complications, and paraplegia. The only independent predictor of paraplegia was clamping time. In conclusion, the simple clamp procedure remains the technique of choice in the majority of patients with descending aortic aneurysms. Atriofemoral bypass is an important adjunct in patients at high risk.
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PMID:Results of contemporary surgical treatment of descending thoracic aortic aneurysms: experience in 198 patients. 873 64

We reviewed the role of the BioMedicus pump in the reduction of neurologic complications following the repair of Type 1 and Type 2 thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms. Since 1991, we have used several different methods for the repair of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms including simple cross-clamping, selective use of the BioMedicus pump, cardiopulmonary bypass with or without profound hypothermia, and most recently, distal aortic perfusion using the BioMedicus pump combined with cerebral spinal fluid drainage. This latter method has been the most promising in rectifying the side effects of aortic clamping and in providing the time necessary for thorough thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair. On our service, the ongoing study of the BioMedicus pump and distal aortic perfusion in conjunction with cerebral spinal fluid drainage has shown that these adjuncts can extend the tolerance of the spinal cord to ischemia and lower the overall rate of neurologic complications for Type 1 and Type 2 thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repairs to a rate of 5% (early results) and 3% (late results). We highly recommend distal aortic perfusion using the BioMedicus pump combined with cerebral spinal fluid drainage for thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair.
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PMID:Role of the BioMedicus pump and distal aortic perfusion in thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair. 881 80

Use of microwave-heated crystalloid fluid has been recommended as one method of correcting hypothermia during resuscitation. We report a case of full-thickness burns and venous thrombosis after microwave-heated crystalloid was infused in the management of a ruptured aortic aneurysm. This case highlights the severity of the burn injury that can occur with infusion of heated fluids. Measuring the temperature of the fluid before the start of the infusion will avoid this complication.
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PMID:Full-thickness burn and venous thrombosis following intravenous infusion of microwave-heated crystalloid fluids. 890 63

A 55-year-old male was diagnosed by CT scan as having a Crawford type I thoracoabdominal aneurysm. An angiogram revealed an aortic aneurysm located from the Th 7 to the visceral vessels of the abdominal aorta and its maximum diameter was 10 cm. Resection and replacement of the aneurysm was performed, but due to the large diameter of the aneurysm, cross-clamping of the descending aorta was impossible. Therefore, the operation was carried out under profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest (HCA). The postoperative course was excellent without any adverse neurological symptoms or complications of any kind. Although HCA has some disadvantages such as coagulation disorders and lung complication, it seems to be a very useful method in cases of reoperation or in cases such as presented here where the aneurysm was of large diameter.
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PMID:[Case report of a thoracoabdominal aneurysm operation using profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest]. 895 88

A 25-year-old with a history of childhood rheumatic fever and resultant mild aortic insufficiency presented for routine prenatal care during her sixth pregnancy. At 14 weeks' gestation; a significant diastolic murmur was identified. Further evaluation revealed a massively dilated, aneurysmal aortic root, moderate to severe aortic insufficiency, and mild left ventricular hypertrophy. Because of the risk of sudden aneurysm rupture and the high mortality associated with this lesion, the patient was advised to undergo therapeutic abortion and aortic valve replacement with arch repair. The patient refused abortion but desired repair during pregnancy in spite of the increased fetal risk. At 17 weeks' gestation, aortic valve replacement and ascending aortic aneurysm excision were performed under pulsatile cardiopulmonary bypass and mild hypothermia. The patient's postoperative course and pregnancy proceeded uneventfully except for one episode of postpericardiotomy syndrome. A healthy, full-term male infant was delivered by spontaneous vaginal delivery. The carefully coordinated combination of obstetric and cardiovascular anesthesia contributed to this successful outcome for mother and child. The principles for fetal preservation and anesthetic considerations for pregnant women undergoing open heart surgery are reviewed.
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PMID:Aortic valve repair and arch replacement during pregnancy: a case report. 909 96

The ruptured thoracic aortic aneurysm is still a dramatic even with very poor outcome, whereby its survival depends largely on early diagnosis and operation. We report a successful case of aortic arch replacement for ruptured aortic arch aneurysm with cardiac tamponade. Lethal hemopericardium causing cardiac tamponade is most commonly seen as a complication of acute myocardial infarction or acute aortic dissection, and subsequent rupture of the heart or ascending aorta leads to the rapid accumulation of blood within the poorly distensible pericardial sac. Our case was operated upon emergency basis due to hemopericardium. On operative findings, the aortic aneurysm located the minor curvature of aortic arch and was a huge saccular shape. In surgical procedure, the total arch replacement was completed using selective cerebral antegrade perfusion with deep hypothermia. Postoperative course was uneventful and no cerebral complication was observed after surgery.
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PMID:[A case of ruptured aortic arch aneurysm with hemorrhagic cardiac tamponade]. 921 85

The lower temperatures utilized during profound hypothermic circulatory arrest (PHCA) surgery may exacerbate the hypothermia associated platelet and clotting factor dysfunction observed in conventional cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) procedures. Hypothermia has been shown to impair the activity of the enzymes involved in the platelet activation pathways and to reduce the enzymatic activity of clotting factors upon coagulation activation. The resulting retardation of the generation of fibrin/platelet clot compounded by the presence of heparin may contribute significantly to a bleeding tendency. Excessive fibrinolytic activity may disrupt surgical wound thrombi and exacerbate haemorrhage. There is good evidence that the fibrinolytic activity, mediated predominantly by tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), is a secondary response to thrombin generated by coagulation activation, which is ongoing during CPB despite full heparinization. The effects of hypothermia on the fibrinolytic response remain to be clarified and the extent to which the lower temperatures and blood stasis associated with PHCA moderate this response is unknown. Despite impairment of coagulation activation by hypothermia there appears to be a shift in the hemostatic balance towards thrombosis presumably as a consequence of endothelial cell injury by both hypothermia and stasis induced ischemia. There is evidence that widespread microvascular thrombus deposition may occur as a consequence of stasis in patients undergoing PHCA and that this might result in vascular occlusion and end organ damage. Although it is not uncommon to find laboratory evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in patients presenting with aortic aneurysm rupture or dissection, the incidence of clinically overt DIC resulting in bleeding is low. The underlying hemostatic disturbance however may contribute to the surgery-associated bleeding diathesis.
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PMID:Hematological consequences of profound hypothermic circulatory arrest and aortic dissection. 927 46


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