Air Embolism Clinical Trial
Official title:
Assessing of Carbon Dioxide Insufflation on the Neurological Complications During Open Heart Operations
Effect of intraoperative insufflation of carbon dioxide on the neurologic complications in the early postoperative period after open cardiac surgery.
Arterial air embolism in cardiac surgery is not a rare complication, leading to neurological
damage in the early postoperative period of 3-5%. Insufflation of carbon dioxide (CO2) into
the operative field to prevent cerebral or myocardial damage by air embolism is reported
since 1967 in open heart surgery (Selman MW et al. 1967).
Carbon dioxide fills the thoracic cavity by gravity and replaces air if adequately
insufflated. Because solubility of CO2 is better than that of air, occlusion or flow
disruption in arteries of the brain or the heart is thought to be diminished. Despite
carefully performed deairing procedures as puncturing of the ascending aorta and cardiac
massage, transcranial Doppler studies revealed large amounts of emboli during the first
ejections of the beating heart (van der Linden J et al. 1991). In patiens with minimally
invasive approach and redo valve surgery, deairing of the cardiac chambers has become more
difficult.
Although the use of carbon dioxide when filling in the surgical field, as the prevention of
air embolism reduces the number of intracardiac emboli according to transesophageal
echocardiography there is no evidence of a sustained reduction in cerebrovascular events (G.
Salvatore al. 2009).
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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