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Effects of Protamine Sulfate on Myocardial Oxygen Supply and Demand in Patients following Cardiopulmonary Bypass
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1982
Year
Cardiogenic ShockCardiothoracic SurgeryCardiac AnaesthesiaCardiovascular DiseaseMyocardial Oxygen SupplyClinical ConditionsProtamine SulfateMedicineCardiopulmonary BypassProtamine DosePharmacotherapyMetabolismAnesthesiaPharmacologyCardiologyPharmacokineticsAnesthesiologyMyocardial Infarction
The effect of protamine sulfate on myocardial oxygen supply and demand was studied under clinical conditions in nine patients following cardiopulmonary bypass. Before surgery, the patients had severe coronary artery disease with good ventricular function. The patients required no vasoactive drugs, but only blood volume adjustments when weaned off bypass, and were hemodynamically stable at the time of study. The protamine dose of 196 mg (2.5 mg/kg) was infused over 4 +/- 1 minutes. Although modest variation in hemodynamic function occurred in individual patients after administration of protamine, there were no significant hemodynamic alterations for the group. No significant alteration in global myocardial metabolism was observed. Protamine caused a small decrease in measured coronary blood flow, resulting in a corresponding reduction in calculated myocardial oxygen consumption as coronary sinus oxygen content remained unaltered. Myocardial lactate extraction showed no significant alteration. It is concluded that protamine sulfate, given at rapid infusion rates in hemodynamically stable patients, is not associated with an adverse alteration in hemodynamics or global myocardial metabolism.