A comparison of low vs conventional-dose heparin for minimal cardiopulmonary bypass in coronary artery bypass grafting surgery

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Abstract

The biocompatibility of minimal extracorporeal circuits has improved; however, anticoagulation is still required. We compared standard high-dose anticoagulation with a low-dose heparin regimen in a retrospective study of patients who underwent coronary bypass surgery using minimal cardiopulmonary bypass. One hundred patients who received 300 IU.kg-1 heparin were compared with 68 patients who received heparin according to an individually adjusted activated coagulation time target of 300 s, resulting in a mean (SD) heparin dose of 145 (30) IU.kg-1. There were no thromboembolic events in either group; however, patients in the low-dose group had lower 24-hour mean (SD) postoperative blood loss than the conventional group (545 (61) vs 680 (88) ml, p = 0.001) and a reduced rate of transfusion of allogeneic blood (15% patients transfused vs 32%, p = 0.01). An individually tailored low-dose heparin regimen for minimal cardiopulmonary bypass is safe and may be associated with reduced bleeding and lower transfusion requirements. © 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland.

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Fromes, Y., Daghildjian, K., Caumartin, L., Fischer, M., Rouquette, I., Deleuze, P., & Bical, O. M. (2011). A comparison of low vs conventional-dose heparin for minimal cardiopulmonary bypass in coronary artery bypass grafting surgery. Anaesthesia, 66(6), 488–492. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2044.2011.06709.x

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