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

The purpose of this study was to evaluate a new approach to managing thrombohemorrhagic diathesis in infants and children undergoing extracorporeal circulation during open-heart surgery. Treatment consisted of administering vitamin K1 and aprotinin preoperatively as well as during bypass and after neutralization of heparin. Operative techniques were either surface-induced deep hypothermia and total circulating arrest or conventional bypass with mild-to-moderate hypothermia. At completion of the intracardiac repair, heparin was neutralized with protamine chloride (1:0.7-0.8). Complete bleeding and clotting studies were carried out in 122 patients before, during, and after the bypass procedure. Most of the infants, especially those with congenital cyanotic heart disease, had marked fibrinolysis and vitamin K1 deficiency preoperatively. All patients postoperatively exhibited fibrinolysis and proteolysis greatly exceeding normal values with increased bleeding tendency. The treatment significantly reduced blood loss and transfusion requirements.
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PMID:Aprotinin in open-heart surgery of infants and children using the heart-lung machine. 620 54

The authors report on their experience of 300 open-heart operations performed in Abidjan for cardiac valve disease (149 cases), congenital cardiopathy (100 cases), endomyocardial fibrosis (40 cases) and other lesions. The operational method involved haemodilution, hypothermia, aortic clamping and cardioplegia. The death rate was 13.3%, mostly due to the severity of the condition prior to surgery. A number of specific points are discussed, including haemodilution without blood perfusions, surgery in patients with sickle-cell anaemia, cardiac valve surgery in children and surgery of endomyocardial fibrosis.
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PMID:[Open-heart surgery in tropical Africa. Results and peculiar problems of the 1st 300 cases of extracorporeal circulation performed in Abidjan]. 630 Aug 24

Between November 1975 and June 1977, 49 children underwent repair of complicated cardiac defects with the aid of deep hypothermia. Circulatory arrest was used in 28 cases. Nine children died (18%) due to early postoperative heart failure. A decisive cause of death in terms of important cardiovascular defects, which were either unknown or not correctable at the time of repair, was found in 6 patients. Children with complicated forms of congenital heart disease requiring an extensive repair were overrepresented among those who died. Hence, there was an excess in the duration of bypass among nonsurvivors (p less than 0.01) whereas the patient's age at operation, the use of circulatory arrest and the duration of aortic occlusion had no bearing on operative mortality. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral metabolism were studied in 9 survivors. A negative correlation (r = -0.67) was found between the duration of circulatory arrest and CBF measured directly after surgery. CBF was reduced to values below 0.2 ml . g-1 . min-1 in 3 children with long periods of circulatory arrest. The cerebral uptake of oxygen and glucose was normal both before and after surgery. Two separate interviews with the parents were performed, the first one 3-22 months and the second one about 3 years after surgery. No serious neurological symptoms or psychomotor disturbances were reported. However, in 3 children operated with circulatory arrest, difficulties in performing more delicate motor activities were noted by the parents. The findings indicate that circulatory arrest should be used with caution and total arrest periods exceeding 60 min avoided.
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PMID:Cerebral blood flow and cerebral metabolism in children following cardiac surgery with deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest. Clinical course and follow-up of psychomotor development. 682 May 74

This is a review of 136 patients who have undergone corrective surgery for congenital heart disease with the aid of profound hypothermia in a 6-year period. Almost all patients were less than one year old and less than 10 kg. In 1979 the average age was 3.4 months and the average weight was 4.1 kg in 34 infants. The hypothermic technique consisted of surface cooling followed by cardiopulmonary bypass cooling and circulatory arrest during definitive surgery. The hospital mortality was 26% for the whole period, having decreased from 53% in 1974 to 15% in 1979. After operation 70% of patients with uncomplicated ventricular septal defect or the tetralogy of Fallot were extubated within 4 hours, 65% of all patients were extubated within 12 hours of operation.
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PMID:Corrective cardiac surgery in infants. A review of 136 patients including the contribution of postoperative ventilation. 700 40

In this experimental work, fertilized chicken eggs were subjected to hypothermia (34.5 degrees) as to inhibit the incorporation of the aortic infundibulum into the left ventricle. This produced a spectrum of biventricular connection of the aorta including double outlet right ventricle (DORV), a cardiopathy seen naturally in man and in chicken. It represents the persistence in the postnatal heart of the spectrum of embryonic aortic dextroposition, a fact which allowed us to establish a precise anatomoembryologic correlation. Pathogenetically, the failure in the connection of the aortic infundibulum with the left ventricle is due to inhibition, in different degrees, of the leftward morphogenetic movement of the infundibular segment, an embryologic process which is discussed in relation to different theories on the origin of DORV. The role played by cell death in normal and pathologic morphogenesis, is emphasized and some methodological aspects on experimental teratogeneses are mentioned.
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PMID:[Spectrum of biventricular aortic connection and double outlet chamber of the right ventricle produced experimentally in the chicken heart by hypothermia (34.5 degrees C)]. 710 9

Profound hypothermia with core cooling has been considered unsafe as compared with surface cooling because of the induced metabolic acidosis. We carried out studies on mongrel dogs to determine whether or nor conventional cardiopulmonary bypass with pulsatile blood flow for core cooling could replace the bypass with non-pulsatile flow. The recovery time from anoxic damage of the brain due to circulatory arrest was also studied. Cerebral excess lactate (delta XL) (Huckabee) was determined throughout the course of hypothermia. During the cooling period from 30 degrees C down to 20 degrees C, the mean value of delta XL in the pulsatile group was significantly lower than that in the non-pulsatile group (p less than 0.01). After forty minutes of the first total arrest at 20 degrees C, thirty minutes of pulsatile perfusion tended to eliminate the anaerobic metabolism of the brain caused by the first total circulatory arrest (p less than 0.1). Thus, the anaerobic metabolism in the brain appears to be highly suppressed with pulsatile cardiopulmonary bypass during the cooling period. Correction of congenital heart disease in infancy can probably be more safely performed if pulsatile cardiopulmonary bypass for cooling and rewarming is employed instead of the non-pulsatile bypass.
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PMID:Application of pulsatile cardiopulmonary bypass for profound hypothermia in cardiac surgery. 720 83

The high mortality of open-heart operations in infants with congenital heart disease has traditionally led to deferral of definitive operation and to use of medical therapy or palliative procedures. The technique of deep hypothermia with circulatory arrest and advances in intensive care have made early repair possible. Since 1973, we have repaired life-threatening but correctable lesions in 11 infants in the first week of life. There are 7 survivors. Four patients had total anomalous pulmonary venous drainage, 2 had truncus arteriosus (1 with aortic arch interruption), and 1 each had pulmonary atresia and intact ventricular septum, critical pulmonary stenosis and intact ventricular septum, D-transposition of the great vessels, tetralogy of Fallot, and left ventricular-aortic tunnel. Postoperative hypoglycemia (less than 50 mg per 100 ml) developed in 4 patients and hypocalcemia (less than 7 mg per 100 ml), in 5. These problems responded appropriately to replacement therapy. Three of the survivors experienced renal failure, a complication subsequently prevented by use of mild hemodilution perfusion. Two patients had major bleeding, which now is prevented by finer suturing and administration of vitamin K and platelets. One infant, moribund with pH of 6.8 when brought to operation, sustained a cardiac arrest with subsequent brain damage. We conclude that newborns with life-threatening malformations can undergo successful repair. Attention must be paid to their unique metabolic demands, and surgical technique must be meticulous. Early operation before clinical deterioration is essential.
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PMID:Open-heart surgery in the first week of life. 735 63

Seventy-two of 76 long-term survivors who had surgical repair of congenital heart lesions at 11 days to 26 months of age using profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest underwent psychometric testing (Stanford-Binet) late postoperatively. The mean IQ of the 72 patients was 92.9 +r16.5 (SD). Stanford-Binet scores bore no relationship to the duration of circulatory arrest or other aspects of surgical technique. Scores were significantly lower in those who had a low birth weight for gestational age, important neurologic problems preoperatively or were in the lower socioeconomic classes. An "ideal" control group of 69 children randomly selected from patients satisfying certain criteria based on birth and neonatal characteristics had a mean IQ of 106.2 +r11.6. Twenty-five patients who had surgical treatment of cogenital heart disease met the criteria for the control group except for their heart lesions. Their mean IQ was 101.4 +r15.0(NS). We could not demonstrate any significant deleterious effect that could be attributed to the surgical methods. Rather, the postoperative IQ scores reflected characteristics related to individual patients.
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PMID:Developmental progress after cardiac surgery in infancy using hypothermia and circulatory arrest. 740 58

For a preoperative evaluation of the factors influencing low output syndrome significatively in open heart surgery where statistically studied 15 factors upon a pattern of 400 patients operated with extracorporeal circulation: age, sex, weight; functional class; cyanosis; pulmonary hypertension; cardiopathy; arterial blood hypertension; myocardiopathy; left ventricular end-diastolic pressure; cardiac index; cardiothoracic index; aortic clamp duration; reoperation; extracorporeal circulation technique. Significant risk factors are: myocardiopathy; aortic clamp duration; functional class; pulmonary hypertension; reoperation; cardiac index; cardiothoracic index and arterial blood hypertension. These factors increase the studied pattern mean risk respectively of a 17.6%; 27.8%; 17.5%; 14.5%; 13.7%; 10.7%; 8.8% and 8.7%. Also myocardial protection technique was considered to be a significant risk factor, since mean risk for low output syndrome is much higher for these patients operated with the coronary perfusion, normothermy and simple hypothermy than for those operated with hypothermia and pharmacologic cardioplegia.
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PMID:[The preoperative evaluation of factors influencing low output syndrome in cardiac surgery (author's transl)]. 743 80

A neonate presented at this institution in September, 1978, with interrupted aortic arch complex, including ventricular septal defect, atrial septal defect, and patent ductus arteriosus. Additional anomalies included bilateral cleft lip and palate, low set ears, and bilateral colobomas. One-stage total correction of the interrupted aortic arch complex was undertaken with standard hypothermic techniques. The repair was completed within a 65 minute period of circulatory arrest at 18 degrees C, perfusion was re-established, and the patient was returned to normothermia. Tetanic contracture of the myocardium, stone heart, was evident at 27 degrees C. Cardiac action did not resume despite several therapeutic maneuvers, and the infant died on the operating table. Extensive calcium flooding was a notable feature on histological sections of the heart, associated with myofibrillar degeneration (contraction bands). This complication has never been reported before in a neonate with congenital heart disease. Deep hypothermia did not prevent ischemic contracture of the myocardium, and this complication must now be added to an already lengthy list of complications of neonatal heart surgery.
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PMID:"Stone heart" in a neonate. 746 8


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