Increasing Mean Arterial Blood Pressure Has No Effect on Jugular Venous Oxygen Saturation in Insulin-Dependent Patients During Tepid Cardiopulmonary Bypass
- 1 August 2002
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Anesthesia & Analgesia
- Vol. 95 (2) , 266-272
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000539-200208000-00002
Abstract
Preexisting diabetes mellitus is one of the major factors related to adverse postoperative neurological disorders after cardiac surgery. In previous reports, we found that diabetic patients more often experienced cerebral desaturation than nondiabetic patients during normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of increasing mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) by the administration of phenylephrine on internal jugular venous oxygen hemoglobin saturation (SjvO2) during tepid CPB in diabetic patients. We studied 20 diabetic patients scheduled for elective coronary artery bypass graft surgery and, as a control, 20 age-matched nondiabetic patients. After the induction of anesthesia, a fiberoptic oximetry catheter was inserted into the right jugular bulb to monitor SjvO2. After measuring the baseline partial pressure of the arterial and jugular venous blood gases and cardiovascular hemodynamic values, MAP was increased by the repeated administration of a 10-microg bolus of phenylephrine until it reached 100% of baseline values. There was a significant difference in SjvO2 value between the Diabetic and CONTROL GROUPs after the administration of phenylephrine (Diabetic group, 56% +/- 6%; 60% +/- 4%) (P < 0.05). There was a significant difference in the arterial-jugular oxygen content difference value between the Diabetic and CONTROL GROUPs after the administration of phenylephrine (diabetic group, 4.9% +/- 0.6%; CONTROL GROUP, 4.5% +/- 0.4%) (P < 0.05). We subdivided the Diabetic group into three groups (Diet Therapy group [n = 4], Glibenclamide group [n = 10], and Insulin-Dependent group [n = 6]). There was a significant difference in the mean slopes of SjvO2 versus cerebral perfusion pressure for increasing cerebral perfusion pressure between the Insulin-Dependent group and the other groups (Dunnett test: P = 0.04). Increasing MAP had no effects on the SjvO2 value in insulin-dependent patients during tepid CPB. We examined the effects of increasing mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) by the administration of phenylephrine on internal jugular venous oxygen saturation (SjvO2) during tepid cardiopulmonary bypass in diabetic patients and found that increasing MAP had no effect on the SjvO2 value in insulin-dependent patients.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of small doses of prostaglandin E1 on systemic hemodynamics and jugular venous oxygen saturation during cardiopulmonary bypassJournal of Clinical Anesthesia, 2001
- Time course of changes in jugular venous oxygen saturation during hypothermic or normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass in patients with diabetes mellitusActa Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 2001
- Jugular bulb oximetry during cardiac surgeryAnaesthesia, 2001
- Jugular Venous Bulb Oxygen Saturation in Patients with Preexisting Diabetes Mellitus or Stroke during Normothermic Cardiopulmonary BypassAnesthesiology, 2000
- Hypercapnia Prevents Jugular Bulb Desaturation during Rewarming from Hypothermic Cardiopulmonary BypassAnesthesiology, 1998
- Jugular Venous Hemoglobin Desaturation during Rewarming on Cardiopulmonary BypassAnesthesiology, 1998
- Jugular Venous Bulb Oxygen Saturation Depends on Blood Pressure During Cardiopulmonary BypassThe Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1998
- Adverse Cerebral Outcomes after Coronary Bypass SurgeryNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996
- Neurologic assessment and cardiac surgeryJournal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia, 1996
- Sites of conduction block in accessory atrioventricular pathways. Basis for concealed accessory pathways.Circulation, 1990