The study aim was to evaluate if an additional separate venous reservoir eliminates CO2-insufflation induced hypercapnia and keeps sweep gas flow of the oxygenator constant during open heart surgery.
Background: CO2-gas insufflation is used for continuous de-airing during open heart surgery. The study aim was to evaluate if an additional separate venous reservoir eliminates CO2-insufflation induced hypercapnea and keeps sweep gas flow of the oxygenator constant. Methods: A separate small reservoir are used during CPB in addition to a standard large venous reservoir. The small reservoir receive drained wound blood and CO2-gas continuously via a suction drain (1 L/min) and handheld suction devices from the open surgical wound. CO2-gas is insufflated via a gas-diffuser in the open surgical wound at 10 L/min. During cross-clamping, gas and blood are either continuously drained to the standard large venous reservoir or not, every 5 minutes after steady state of PaCO2 is observed, after adjustment of sweep gas flow as necessary. Mean values for each setup (2-4 times) for each patient will be analyzed with Wilcoxon rank-sum test.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10
Clamping of the tube between the additional and standard venous reservoir
Karolinska University Hospital
Stockholm, Sweden
RECRUITINGDifference in PaCO2 (kPa)
Time frame: At 5 minutes steady state
Oxygenator sweep gas flow rate (L/min)
Time frame: At 5 minutes steady state
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