Issue |
J Extra Corpor Technol
Volume 48, Number 2, June 2016
|
|
---|---|---|
Page(s) | 79 - 82 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/ject/201648079 | |
Published online | 15 June 2016 |
Case Reports
Cold Agglutinin Autoantibodies in a Patient without a Visible Coronary Sinus Ostium: Strategies for Myocardial Protection without Using Retrograde Cardioplegia
* Durham VA Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina; and
† Duke University Hospital, Durham, North Carolina
Address correspondence to: Michele Heath, CCP, Durham VA Medical Center, 508 Fulton Street, Durham, NC 27705. E-mail: Michele.Heath@va.gov
Received:
11
April
2016
Accepted:
15
June
2016
The presence of cold agglutinins (CA) during cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass usually creates the need for an altered surgical plan. In this case, the CA were discovered after the initiation of bypass, limiting the time, and cardioplegia solutions that could be used in the new approach. The inability to cannulate the coronary sinus with a retrograde cardioplegia catheter excluded the standard approach to myocardial preservation with CA of using continuous warm blood. For this case, we used intermittent cold crystalloid delivered via the antegrade needle for the first half of the procedure and through the saphenous vein graft anastomosis during the aortic valve portion of the cross-clamp period.
Key words: antibody/antigen / cardioplegia / coronary sinus / hematology
© 2016 AMSECT
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