Up to 15% of operations in cardio-pulmonary by-pass are complicated by excessive postoperative blood loss, which negatively affects the outcomes. Recently, it has been demonstrated that fibrin clot susceptibility to lysis is a modulator of postoperative blood loss after cardiac surgery for aortic stenosis. Earlier, a preliminary study showed a negative association of postoperative blood loss after coronary artery by-pass grafting (CABG) with fibrin clot lysis time, reflecting susceptibility to fibrinolysis. In CABG, postoperative blood loss may depend on the operative technique with respect to left internal mammary artery (LIMA) harvesting. LIMA is taken down in virtually all CABG procedures, but harvesting technical details remain at surgeons discretion (skeletonization without opening the pleural cavity vs. pedicled graft with pleura wide open). The investigators decided to test the hypothesis that fibrin clot properties modulate the postoperative drainage following CABG strongly enough to attenuate the influence of surgical technique by randomizing the patients undergoing CABG with regard to LIMA harvesting technique.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
62
Standard CABG - no different form any other procedure of this type except LIMA will be skeletonized without opening the pleura
Standard CABG - no different form any other procedure of this type except LIMA will be taken down as a pedicled graft with opening the pleura
The John Paul II Hospital
Krakow, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland
Postoperative chest-tube output after 12 hours
Drainage volume after 12 hours
Time frame: 12 hours from the end of operation
Perioperative myocardial infarction
Change in myocardial necrosis biomarkers (Troponin T, creatine kinase) during first 48 hours postoperatively
Time frame: 48 hours after the procedure
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