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Chapter category: Heart

Cardiopulmonary Bypass and Inflammation

This chapter appears in the following book:

Off-Pump Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery

Edited by: Raymond Cartier
ISBN: 1-58706-075-2
» Get more information about this book at landesbioscience.com «

Chapter authors:
Francois Dagenais

In the 1920s, Brukhonenko was the first to advance the concept of total body perfusion with removal of the heart.1 However, the development of a true heart-lung machine could not be fully explored until the emergence of new scientific knowledge, such as blood compatibility, identification of a reliable anticoagulant (heparin) and anticoagulant antagonist (protamine), the establishment of metabolic needs during hypothermia and implementation of the roller pump.2 Inspired by the tragic death of a young gravid woman sustaining a massive pulmonary embolus, Dr John Gibbon Jr was the first to suggest coupling the extracorporeal circulation with an oxygenator to conduct cardiac surgery procedures.3 Through constant refinement of his heart-lung machine model over almost two decades, Dr. Gibbon successfully performed an atrial septal defect closure in a young woman in May 1953, using total extracorporeal circulation.4 Such a pioneering contributive association with the works of others, such as Lillehei on the cross-circulation, Bigelow on deep hypothermia and Melrose on myocardial protection, prompted a new era in the surgical management of cardiac disorders.

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Additional chapters from this book:

Principles of Stabilization and Hemodynamics in OPCAB Surgery

Raymond Cartier

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Pierre Couture, Andre Denault, Patrick Limoges, Peter Sheridan and Denis Babin

Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) on the beating heart has become a widely applied procedure. OPCAB grafting is quite attractive because of the obvious advantages of avoiding cardiopulmonary by...

Historical Considerations

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Effects of Vascular-Interrupting and Hemostatic Devices on Coronary Artery Endothelial Function in Beating Heart Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery

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Coronary artery bypass grafting was first conceived and experimented on by the French Nobel Prize winner in Medicine Alexis Carrel at the beginning of the previous century. 1 Sabiston, in 1962, perf...

Cardiopulmonary Bypass and Inflammation

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The Future of Coronary Artery Surgery: Quo Vadimus?

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As Dr. Paul Cartier vividly described in the Foreword of this book, there has been great progress in coronary artery surgery in the past half century. Thanks to the courageous and ingenious efforts ...

OPCAB Surgery in High Risk-Patients

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The advent of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) circulation in the past half century has revolutionized the field of cardiac surgery. Although CPB has been associated with very low morbidity, its side-ef...

Cerebral Complications Following Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting Surgery

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Systematic OPCAB Surgery for Multivessel Disease With the CoroNeo Cor-Vasc Device

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Introduced in the mid-1960s for single vessel, OPCAB surgery is currently applicable to multivessel disease.1-4 The advent of mechanical stabilizers has been, without any doubt, a giant leap in the ...

Indications and Surgical Strategies for OPCAB

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Since its reintroduction in the late 1990s, OPCAB surgery has been adopted by the inter national community in a proportion fluctuating from 1% to 98%.1,2 This large vari ability clearly reflects an ...

Potential Benefit of OPCAB Surgery

Marzia Leache and Raymond Cartier

Since the introduction of the extra-corporeal circulation (ECC) in the late fifties, its use has been seen as a necessary evil to perform surgery on the heart. The systemic inflamma tory reaction ge...


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