Title: CSC Review Course: Session 1
1CSC Review CourseSession 1
- Myra F Ellis, RN, MSN, CCRN-CSC
- Duke Heart Center
- Duke University Hospital
2Preoperative Evaluation
- Coronary anatomy review
- Indications for cardiac surgery
- Risks of cardiac surgery
- Factors increasing mortality
- Factors increasing morbidity
3Intraoperative Management
- Myocardial protection cardioplegia
- Conduct of cardiopulmonary bypass
- Deep hypothermic circulatory arrest
- Cerebral perfusion
- Consequences of CPB
4Coronary Circulation
- At rest, myocardium extracts most of the
available O2 (70) - Flow determined by pressure and resistance
(CPPDBP-LVEDP) - Increase in demand must be met by an increase in
flow - LV circulation
5Right Coronary Artery
- Arises from aorta and courses AV groove
- Bifurcates at junction of right and left atria
- SA node (55)
- AV node (90)
- Bundle of HIS
- RA and RV
- Inferior surface of LV
- Posterior 1/3 of septum
- Posterior/inferior division of left bundle
6Left Main Coronary Artery
- 2-5 cm in length
- Bifurcates into LAD and Circumflex
- Carries worst prognosis in terms of survival
- Not grafted directly
- Inaccessible without dividing PA and aorta
7Left Anterior Descending
- 50 of total LV blood flow
- Diagonal branches pass over LV
- Anterior wall of LV
- Anterior 2/3 of septum
- Posterior/inferior division of left bundle
- Bundle of HIS
- Right bundle branch
- Anterior/superior division of left bundle
- Apex of LV
8Circumflex Artery
- Courses AV groove beneath L atrial appendage
- Obtuse marginal branches
- SA node (45)
- AV node (10)
- Inferior surface of LV
- Lateral wall of LV
- LA
- Posterior/inferior division of left bundle branch
9Tertiary Left Main
- Between LAD and Cx - Ramus artery
- Can be large vessel
- Usually subepicardial for only a few cm
10Summary
- Vessels grafted determine optimal ECG leads for
postoperative monitoring - ST segment monitoring is recommended
- AACN Practice Alert ST Segment Monitoring
11Indications for Revascularization
- Chronic stable angina
- Unresponsive to treatment
- Degree of symptoms
- Left main disease
- Stenosis gt 50
- Widow-maker
- CASS study
12Indications (continued)
- Triple vessel disease
- 2 lesions or more
- CASS - improved survival with surgery
- Unstable angina
- Increasing symptoms
- Indicates imbalance between O2 supply and demand
- Pt at risk for ischemic events
13Indications (continued)
- Acute MI
- Controversial
- Best outcomes
- Intractable ventricular irritability
- Complications from MI
- Refractory to medical treatment
14Indications (continued)
- LV failure
- Data inconsistent
- VSD repair
- Cardiogenic shock
- High mortality with medical management
- Results of CABG based on LV damage
15Indications (continued)
- PTCA failure
- Less than 2 of patients develop complications
- Emergent CABG within 24 hours increases mortality
- Restenosis rate is high
16Summary
- Patients that benefit the most from surgery are
the sickest - Patients with less severe disease and preserved
LV function have less admissions and procedures
with CABG
17Contraindications
- Small, narrow vessels
- Diffuse disease
- Lack of conduit
- Severe aortic sclerosis
- Severe LV dysfunction
18Increased Risk
- Age gt 65
- Female gender
- Previous heart surgery
- Urgency of operation
- Low EF
- Percent stenosis of LMCA
- Number of arteries greater than 70
- STS website risk calculation
19Less Important Factors
- PTCA during index admission
- MI within 1 week
- History of angina
- Ventricular dysrrhythmias
- CHF
- Mitral regurgitation
- Presence of comorbidities DM, CVA, PVD, COPD,
CRI
20Myocardial Preservation
- Prevent heart damage during surgery
- Based on principles of myocardial function
- Blood flow regulation
- Ischemia is more damaging than hypoxia
- LV subendocardium is most vulnerable
- Hypothermia diminishes the effects of ischemia
21Techniques of Myocardial Preservation
- Traditional use of cardioplegia and aortic
cross-clamp - Allows still, bloodless field for surgeon
- Combination approach
- Cardioplegia - induction and maintenance of the
heart in an arrested state
22Hypothermia
- Systemic cooling
- Bathing the heart
- Cold cardioplegia
- Medications
23Cardioplegia Ingredients
- Depolarizing agent
- Temperature of 4 8 degrees Celsius
- Substrate for energy
- Buffering agent
- Membrane stabilizing agent
- High osmolarity
24Autologous Blood Cardioplegia
- Improves O2 delivery
- Hypothermia causes left shift of oxyhemoglobin
curve
25Administration of Cardioplegia
- Antegrade
- Catheter proximal to cross clamp
- Initial volume 1.5 L
- Global arrest in 30 seconds
- Reinfuse periodically
- Retrograde
- Catheter inserted transatrially
- Often combined with antegrade
26Cardiopulmonary Bypass
- First CPB in 1950s
- Primed with whole blood
- Crystalloid prime
- Prophylactic blood products
- 1980s lower HCT
- Recent improvements
27Anticoagulation
- Heparin
- Natural substance
- Has an antidote
- ACT (activated clotting time) allows close
titration
28Components of CPB
- Arterial and venous cannulae
- Oxygenator
- Reservoir
- Pumps
- Filters
- Heat exchanger
- Hemoconcentrator
29Initiation of CPB
- CPB circuit primed
- Heparin at 300 u/kg
- Surgeon inserts cannulae
- Cardiac operations performed with cardioplegia
and aortic x-clamp - Pt connected to tubing of CPB circuit
30Initiation (continued)
- Initiate venous drainage, then arterial pump
- Blood cooled slowly
- Hemodilution
- Maintenance of CPB
31Weaning from CPB
- Rewarming
- Air removed from aorta
- Aortic cross-clamp off
- Establish sinus rhythm
- Ventilate lungs
- Retard venous drainage
32Weaning (continued)
- Atrial cannula out
- Protamine
- Remove arterial cannula
- Additional oxygenator blood given
- Failure to wean
33Deep Hypothermic Circulatory Arrest (DHCA)
- Operations of the Aorta
- Patient placed on CPB temp ? to 18 degrees
Celsius - Complete suppression of cerebral activity
- ? O2 consumption
- Monitor temperature at multiple sites
34DHCA (continued)
- Safe duration unknown
- Alpha-stat pH management
- Rewarm slowly
- Maintain euglycemia
35Cerebral Perfusion
- Adjunct to DHCA for ? cerebral protection
- Hypothermia ? O2 consumption
- Antegrade
- Offers best cerebral protection and maintains
cerebral hypothermia - Retrograde
- Flow through SVC
- Clamp IVC
36Other Adjuncts
- Ice-packing of the head
- Wait for electrical silence
- Monitor jugular SvO2
- Hematocrit greater than 20
- ??? pulsatile flow
37Physiologic Effects of CPB
- Complement activation
- Blood- extracorporeal circuit
- Anaphalaxatoxin c3a
- Chemotoxin c5a
- Initiates coagulation and fibrinolytic cascades
38Physiologic Effects of CPB
- Endocrine - altered hormone production
- Altered hormone degradation by lungs
- Altered release of hormones
- Lowered concentrations of hormones
- Increased catecholamine production
- Hyperglycemia
39Physiologic Effects of CPB
- Cerebral
- High degree of dysfunction
- Strokes
- Autoregulation
- Microembolization
- Pulmonary
- Complement activation
- O2 free radicals
40Physiologic Effects of CPB
- Hematologic
- Platelet dysfunction - bind procoagulants
- Coagulation factors
- Red blood cells
41Physiologic Effects of CPB
- Renal
- Hemodilution preserves RBF
- Hemolysis may cause ATN
- Vulnerable to low flow
42Complications of CPB
- Air embolus
- Malfunction of CPB
- Protamine reaction
- Vasodilation and hypotension
- Systemic inflammatory response
- Post-perfusion syndrome
- Rare complications