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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 47, 384-390, Copyright © 1989 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
SR Gundry, A Sequeira, TR Coughlin and JS McLaughlin
Conduction system disturbances after cardioplegia are well described. Our
four-man group changed in mid-1987 from standard crystalloid cardioplegia
(35 mEq/L of KCl) to blood cardioplegia (4 parts blood to 1 part
cardioplegia) (18 mEq/L of KCl) based on experimental and clinical evidence
that blood cardioplegia provides better myocardial protection. Shortly
thereafter, we anecdotally noted increased conduction abnormalities. This
prompted us to compare serially all patients undergoing coronary artery
bypass grafting during 1987 for perioperative and late conduction system
disturbances after either crystalloid or blood cardioplegia. Surgeons and
techniques including topical cooling did not differ. Forty-one (23%) of 179
patients with crystalloid cardioplegia had conduction disturbances versus
141 (49%) of 289 patients with blood cardioplegia (p less than 0.001).
Perioperative complete heart block requiring atrioventricular sequential
pacing occurred in 20 patients with crystalloid cardioplegia versus 67
patients with blood cardioplegia (p less than 0.002), and atrioventricular
block requiring permanent pacing was present in 4 and 12 patients (p less
than 0.001), respectively. Left bundle-branch block was found in 8 patients
given crystalloid cardioplegia and 28 patients with blood cardioplegia (p
less than 0.05); right bundle-branch block, 12 and 68 patients (p less than
0.001); left anterior hemiblock, 8 and 37 patients (p less than 0.001); and
interventricular conduction delay, 15 and 53 patients (p less than 0.005),
respectively. Bifascicular block occurred in 4 patients receiving
crystalloid cardioplegia versus 23 receiving blood cardioplegia (p less
than 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Postoperative conduction disturbances: a comparison of blood and crystalloid cardioplegia
Department of Surgery, University of Maryland Medical System, Baltimore.
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