Assisted Circulation
- 1 March 1964
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 88 (3) , 327-344
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1964.01310210001001
Abstract
Assistance to the failing heart by extracorporeal circulation techniques may benefit a number of disease states involving the right or left ventricle or both. A partial list of such conditions would include: 1. Acute myocardial infarction 2. Shock due to hemorrhage or sepsis 3. Postoperative states (postcardiotomy) 4. Preoperative states (treatment of intractable failure prior to surgical correction of cardiac disease) 5. Pulmonary disease with right ventricular failure The goal of mechanical assistance to the heart is a decrease in the external work to be furnished by the failing myocardium and maintenance of adequate pulmonary and systemic flows and pressures. The following methods of mechanical assistance have been used clinically and/or experimentally. 1. Cardiopulmonary bypass, partial or total * 2. Veno-arterial pumping without oxygenator (partial bypass)5,9,12,30 3. Right heart bypass 4. Left heart bypass3,4,8,21 5. Counterpulsation (postsystolic augmentation) † A limitation inherent in all of these methods is theKeywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reducation of the Utilization of the Heart by Left Heart BypassCirculation Research, 1962
- Postsystolic myocardial augmentation: physiological considerations and techniqueJournal of Applied Physiology, 1962
- Postsystolic Myocardial Augmentation: 1. Effect Upon an Induced Shock State.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1961
- Comparison of Two Types of Mechanical Assistance in Experimental Heart FailureCirculation Research, 1960
- THE EFFECT OF PARTIAL EXTRACORPOREAL BYPASS ON SODIUM EXCRETION IN NORMAL DOGS AND IN THOSE WITH HEART FAILURE1960
- Partial extracorporeal circulation in closed-chest dogsJournal of Applied Physiology, 1959
- Hemodynamic Determinants of Oxygen Consumption of the Heart With Special Reference to the Tension-Time IndexAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1957