Objectives: This study was undertaken to compare conventional
cardioplegic strategies with a new approach that uses a modified
nonpotassium maintenance solution between cardioplegia doses
in stressed neonatal hearts.
Methods: Thirty-five neonatal piglets
underwent 60 minutes of ventilator hypoxia (inspired oxygen
fraction 8%−10%) followed by 20 minutes of ischemia on cardiopulmonary
bypass. In 10 animals bypass was discontinued without further
ischemia (stress control group). The other 25 received a warm
blood cardioplegic induction and were separated into 5 groups.
In 5 animals cardiopulmonary bypass was discontinued without
further ischemia (cardioplegia control group); the remaining
20 underwent an additional 70 minutes of cold blood cardioplegic
arrest. Five received only intermittent cardioplegia every 20
minutes, whereas 15 also received cold blood maintenance infusions
between cardioplegic doses (integrated strategy). In 5 of these
animals the blood was unmodified, whereas in 10 a modified nonpotassium
«cardioplegia-like» solution was delivered either antegradely
(n = 5) or retrogradely (n = 5). Myocardial function was assessed
by pressure-volume loops (expressed as percentage of control);
vascular function was assessed by coronary vascular resistance.
Results: All piglets that underwent hypoxic ischemic stress
alone (controls) died. Warm induction alone (cardioplegic controls)
partially repaired the stress injury. Intermittent cardioplegia
preserved the depressed systolic function
(end-systolic elastance
40% vs 39%), increased diastolic stiffness (255% vs 239%), reduced
adenosine triphosphate (10.6 vs 12.2 µg/g tissue), and
elevated coronary vascular resistance at levels identical to
warm induction alone; infusing unmodified blood between cardioplegia
doses (standard integrated) improved results slightly. In contrast,
infusion of a cold modified solution (antegrade or retrograde)
between cardioplegia doses (modified integrated) completely
restored systolic function
(end-systolic elastance 100% and
97%,
P < .001 vs intermittent and standard integrated), only
minimally increased diastolic stiffness (159% and 156%,
P <
.001 vs intermittent and standard integrated), restored adenosine
triphosphate (18.8 and 16.6 µg/g,
P < .001 vs intermittent
and standard integrated), and normalized coronary vascular resistance
(
P < .001 vs intermittent and standard integrated). This
strategy was used in 72 consecutive hypoxic patients (21 arterial
switch operations, retrograde; 51 Fontan procedures, antegrade)
with a 2.8% mortality.
Conclusions: Infusion of a cold modified
solution between cardioplegic doses (modified integrated protection)
significantly improved myocardial protection in the stressed
neonatal heart, was effective delivered either antegradely or
retrogradely, and was used successfully for hypoxic (stressed)
pediatric patients.