British Journal of Anaesthesia, Vol 84, Issue 1 23-27, Copyright © 2000 by Oxford University Press
PD Booker and M Pozzi
We used a laser Doppler probe to measure gastric mucosal blood flow (flux)
and a paediatric tonometer to intermittently calculate gastric- arterial
PCO2 difference (PrCO2-PaCO2 gap) in 50 infants aged 0.3-52 weeks who
required hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). During CPB, patients in
group 2 (n = 25) were given dopexamine 1.0 mg kg-1 over 5 min, followed by
an infusion of 2 micrograms kg-1 min-1. Patients in group 1 (n = 25)
received an equal volume of saline. Drug allocation was random and blinded.
Measurements of flux, PrCO2-PaCO2 gap and mean femoral arterial pressure
(MAP) were made over 5 min during steady state before and after cooling on
CPB to 18-24 degrees C. MAP and blood lactate concentrations were similar
in both groups throughout CPB. Mean flux decreased from 182 (SD 60) at the
beginning of CPB to 158 (51) after rewarming on CPB in group 1, whereas it
increased from 180 (56) to 196 (49) in group 2. This post-rewarm flux was
significantly greater in group 2 than in group 1 (P = 0.01). Similarly,
mean PrCO2-PaCO2 gap increased significantly from 3.6 (6.3) to 8.2 (6.7) in
group 1 (P = 0.01) compared with a significant decrease from 5.8 (5.5) to
2.1 (5.5) in group 2 (P = 0.02). Mean PrCO2-PaCO2 gap after rewarming in
group 2 was significantly higher than that in group 1 (P = 0.001). These
data indicate that dopexamine may be useful in maintaining normal gut
perfusion in infants requiring hypothermic CPB.
ARTICLES
A placebo-controlled study of the effects of dopexamine on gastric mucosal perfusion in infants undergoing hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass
University of Liverpool, Royal Liverpool Children's Hospital, UK.
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