Coronary artery surgery: cardiotomy suction or cell salvage?

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) today results in what may be regarded as acceptable levels of blood loss with many institutions avoiding allogeneic red cell transfusion in over 60% of their patients. The majority of cardiac surgeons employ cardiotomy sucti...

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Main Authors: Kelleher Andrea, Shah Hetul, Lau Kelvin, Moat Neil
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2007-10-01
Series:Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery
Online Access:http://www.cardiothoracicsurgery.org/content/2/1/46
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spelling doaj-3c9b1bf6c5624fd9884b1f1c5276d7e42020-11-24T21:25:04ZengBMCJournal of Cardiothoracic Surgery1749-80902007-10-01214610.1186/1749-8090-2-46Coronary artery surgery: cardiotomy suction or cell salvage?Kelleher AndreaShah HetulLau KelvinMoat Neil<p>Abstract</p> <p>Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) today results in what may be regarded as acceptable levels of blood loss with many institutions avoiding allogeneic red cell transfusion in over 60% of their patients. The majority of cardiac surgeons employ cardiotomy suction to preserve autologous blood during on-pump coronary artery bypass surgery; however the use of cardiotomy suction is associated with a more pronounced systemic inflammatory response and a resulting coagulopathy as well as exacerbating the microembolic load. This leads to a tendency to increased blood loss, transfusion requirement and organ dysfunction. Conversely, the avoidance of cardiotomy suction in coronary artery bypass surgery is not associated with an increased transfusion requirement. There is therefore no indication for the routine use of cardiotomy suction in on-pump coronary artery surgery.</p> http://www.cardiothoracicsurgery.org/content/2/1/46
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kelleher Andrea
Shah Hetul
Lau Kelvin
Moat Neil
spellingShingle Kelleher Andrea
Shah Hetul
Lau Kelvin
Moat Neil
Coronary artery surgery: cardiotomy suction or cell salvage?
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery
author_facet Kelleher Andrea
Shah Hetul
Lau Kelvin
Moat Neil
author_sort Kelleher Andrea
title Coronary artery surgery: cardiotomy suction or cell salvage?
title_short Coronary artery surgery: cardiotomy suction or cell salvage?
title_full Coronary artery surgery: cardiotomy suction or cell salvage?
title_fullStr Coronary artery surgery: cardiotomy suction or cell salvage?
title_full_unstemmed Coronary artery surgery: cardiotomy suction or cell salvage?
title_sort coronary artery surgery: cardiotomy suction or cell salvage?
publisher BMC
series Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery
issn 1749-8090
publishDate 2007-10-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) today results in what may be regarded as acceptable levels of blood loss with many institutions avoiding allogeneic red cell transfusion in over 60% of their patients. The majority of cardiac surgeons employ cardiotomy suction to preserve autologous blood during on-pump coronary artery bypass surgery; however the use of cardiotomy suction is associated with a more pronounced systemic inflammatory response and a resulting coagulopathy as well as exacerbating the microembolic load. This leads to a tendency to increased blood loss, transfusion requirement and organ dysfunction. Conversely, the avoidance of cardiotomy suction in coronary artery bypass surgery is not associated with an increased transfusion requirement. There is therefore no indication for the routine use of cardiotomy suction in on-pump coronary artery surgery.</p>
url http://www.cardiothoracicsurgery.org/content/2/1/46
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AT shahhetul coronaryarterysurgerycardiotomysuctionorcellsalvage
AT laukelvin coronaryarterysurgerycardiotomysuctionorcellsalvage
AT moatneil coronaryarterysurgerycardiotomysuctionorcellsalvage
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