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Perfusion NewswireTiny Perfusion LetterPerfusion.com Cardiovascular News Roundup: January 3, 2023

Perfusion.com Cardiovascular News Roundup: January 3, 2023

Relevant reading, listening, or viewing – curated by the creator of Tiny Perfusion Letter, Luc Puis


Every week, we collect 10 or 20 articles from the peer-reviewed literature that we think will be of interest to the perfusionist community. Feel free to comment on the findings or suggest entries for the newsletter by emailing the Editor – Luc Puis.

Cardiac Surgery and CPB Quality Rises

Today’s Cardio RoundUp can be loosely divided into three topics. Before we start with measures to improve the quality of care to our patients on cardiopulmonary bypass, we take a look at three observations on surgical quality improvement: data, well-conducted efforts, and local small-scale improvements.

Things you can do on bypass are the following: read this expert review on the neurologic decline after CPB and get caught up on the latest findings. Like this randomized controlled study on the effects of intraoperative hyperoxygenation on neurologic outcomes. Pssst! It’s bad for your patients!

The jury is still not out on what the ideal MAP during CPB is, and this retrospective study is not able to shed light on that. It concludes that a higher MAP (65–75 mmHg) during cardiopulmonary bypass does not significantly prevent acute kidney injury in elderly patients undergoing cardiac valve surgery.

A different approach, gaining much popularity in Europe, is the use of Minimal Invasive ECC (MiECC). This study showed that the expression of mitochondrial DNA (a marker of inflammation) was significantly lower in patients undergoing cardiac surgery with MiECC compared to conventional CPB.

Something else that works for quality improvement is a checklist. In this study, researchers from the Netherlands discuss their pre-incision checklist and how adaptation of surgical handling affects the outcome of their patients.

Blood Management

Every week we have a portion on patient blood management and (anti)coagulation. It’s what we do, right? Well, we still don’t know exactly what we’re doing when giving heparin, but machine learning might help us in predicting the therapeutic response to heparin therapy.

Meanwhile, perfusionists’ autotransfusion wisdom is sometimes needed in other types of surgery, like orthopedics. The WHITE-9 study will compare intraoperative cell salvage and autotransfusion with standard care in the treatment of hip fractures: this is the protocol.

Lately, there has been a big buzz around adsorptive blood purification strategies during CPB. This review summarizes the relevant evidence and suggests future potential research areas.

ECLS

To conclude this RoundUp, we report on a comparative multicenter study showing that adjunctive IABP did not translate into better outcomes in patients treated with VA-ECMO for postcardiotomy shock. Bummer.

Enjoy the read!

Sources

Quality Improvement in Cardiac Surgery and Cardiopulmonary Bypass

PBM

ECLS – VAD


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