Overview
Cardiopulmonary bypass during cardiac surgery provides blood flow to the body during surgery but has adverse effects on different organs. Blood flow during cardiopulmonary bypass may be pulsatile or non-pulsatile, which may impact normal organ function after surgery. The study will collect data on the type of cardiopulmonary bypass used during surgery and organ function to determine if there is an association between the type of bypass and organ function.
Description
Cardiac surgery is a high-risk elective surgical procedure frequently requiring CPB in which a machine pumps blood while the surgeon operates on the heart. CPB contributes to surgical risk by causing endothelial dysfunction and acute kidney injury (AKI). Endothelial dysfunction and AKI happen because heart lung machines typically generate non-pulsatile blood flow, which is abnormal and results in impaired tissue oxygen delivery. Normal blood flow is pulsatile due intermittent contraction and relaxation of the heart during the cardiac cycle, which produces a mechanical signal that induces endothelial cells to produce nitric oxide. Without nitric oxide, blood flow does not penetrate as deeply into organs such as the kidneys which leads to acute kidney injury. AKI increases mortality 10-fold after cardiac surgery placing many people at risk since over 400,000 people have surgery with CPB each year in the United States. Thus, pulsatile CPB may influence endothelial function and renal blood flow after cardiac surgery. This study will observe patients undergoing cardiac surgery with CPB and compare patients who receive pulsatile or non-pulsatile CPB.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age 50 to 70
- Able to provide informed consent
- Scheduled for elective cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients undergoing emergency procedures
- Diagnosed with sepsis
- Experiencing delirium
- Experiencing hemodynamic instability (heart rate > 100 and systolic blood pressure < 90)
- Patients with a mechanical circulatory support device
- Requiring vasoactive medications before surgery
- Patients with a reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (less than 50%)
- Patients with a contraindication to transesophageal echocardiography