Lung Protection Strategies during Cardiopulmonary Bypass Affect the Composition of Blood Electrolytes and Metabolites—A Randomized Controlled Trial

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Katrine B. Buggeskov
  • Raluca G. Maltesen
  • Bodil S. Rasmussen
  • Munsoor A. Hanifa
  • Lund, Morten Asp Vonsild
  • Reinhard Wimmer
  • Hanne B. Ravn
Cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) causes an acute lung ischemia-reperfusion injury, which can develop to pulmonary dysfunction postoperatively. This sub-study of the Pulmonary Protection Trial aimed to elucidate changes in arterial blood gas analyses, inflammatory protein interleukin-6, and metabolites of 90 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients following two lung protective regimens of pulmonary artery perfusion with either hypothermic histidine-tryptophan-ketoglutarate (HTK) solution or normothermic oxygenated blood during CPB, compared to the standard CPB with no pulmonary perfusion. Blood was collected at six time points before, during, and up to 20 h post-CPB. Blood gas analysis, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy were used, and multivariate and univariate statistical analyses were performed. All patients had decreased gas exchange, augmented inflammation, and metabolite alteration during and after CPB. While no difference was observed between patients receiving oxygenated blood and standard CPB, patients receiving HTK solution had an excess of metabolites involved in energy production and detoxification of reactive oxygen species. Also, patients receiving HTK suffered a transient isotonic hyponatremia that resolved within 20 h post-CPB. Additional studies are needed to further elucidate how to diminish lung ischemia-reperfusion injury during CPB, and thereby, reduce the risk of developing severe postoperative pulmonary dysfunction.
Original languageEnglish
Article number462
JournalJournal of Clinical Medicine
Volume7
Issue number11
Pages (from-to)1-18
Number of pages18
ISSN2077-0383
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2018

    Research areas

  • COPD, ischemia-reperfusion, CPB, lung protection, pulmonary perfusion, HTK, oxygenated blood, metabolites, randomized controlled trial

Number of downloads are based on statistics from Google Scholar and www.ku.dk


No data available

ID: 210013272