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Arterial and Venous Thrombelastograph® Variables Differ During Cardiac Surgery
19
Citations
22
References
2001
Year
Adult Cardiac SurgeryShorter Reaction TimeSurgeryReaction TimeThrombosisVenous ThrombosisVascular SurgeryVascular ImagingPublic HealthCardiologyCardiothoracic SurgeryVenous DiseaseCardiac SurgeryPulmonary EmbolismCoagulation AnalyzerCardiovascular DiseaseArterial ReconstructionsCoagulopathyMedicineEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
The Thrombelastograph® (TEG®; Haemoscope Corp., Skokie, IL) coagulation analyzer is an effective point-of-care monitor for routine clinical practice and clinical research. Prior investigators have used either arterial or venous samples of blood for TEG® measurements. We conducted this prospective cohort study to determine potential differences in TEG® variables between arterial and venous blood samples. Arterial and venous samples were drawn from 40 cardiac surgical patients, yielding 134 pairs for comparison. Twenty-nine comparisons (control) were between arterial and arterial samples and were not significantly different. For the arterial and venous comparisons (n = 105), mean (±sd) arterial and venous values were the following: reaction time, 10 ± 2 mm vs 13 ± 4 mm, P = 0.004; maximum amplitude, 59 ± 9 mm vs 49 ± 12 mm, P < 0.001; α angle, 61 ± 10 degrees vs 51 ± 14 degrees, P < 0.001; K, 5 ± 2 mm vs 8 ± 4 mm, P = 0.007; and lysis, 2.5 ± 1.7 vs 2.5 ± 2.0 (not significant), arterial versus venous, respectively. Arterial blood samples demonstrated TEG® values reflecting stronger (larger maximum amplitude) and faster (shorter reaction time and K value, wider α angle) clot formation. The results suggest that users of TEG® coagulation analyzers should be consistent with the site of blood sampling given the potential differences obtained.
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