A femoral artery cannula that allows distal blood flow

Autor: James A. Magovern, Dennis Kopilec, James D. Fonger, Dennis R. Trumble, Douglas E. Smith, David H.J. Wang
Rok vydání: 2005
Předmět:
Zdroj: The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery. 130(3):684-686
ISSN: 0022-5223
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2005.03.022
Popis: ObjectiveA femoral artery cannula is used for certain types of circulatory support but can cause ischemia, especially during prolonged perfusion. This study tests the function of a femoral cannula designed to allow proximal and distal blood flow.MethodsFive pigs were used in the study. In each animal a distal-flow cannula was implanted in the femoral artery of one leg, and the same-sized standard cannula was implanted in the other. Blood was drained from the left atrium and delivered to the femoral artery through the distal-flow cannula or standard cannula by using a centrifugal pump. An ultrasonic flow probe and microspheres were used to quantify flow and perfusion distal to the cannula.ResultsDistal femoral flow and tissue perfusion were present in all animals (5/5) with the distal-flow cannula but only in 1 of 5 animals with the standard cannula (P < .048). Distal flow did not change with pump flow. Mean distal flow at each level of pump flow was higher with the distal-flow cannula (P < .05). Tissue perfusion was also higher with the distal-flow cannula (0.052 ± 0.028 vs 0.010 ± 0.022 mL·min−1·g−1, P < .03).ConclusionsIn the swine model the distal-flow cannula allowed greater and more consistent distal flow than the standard cannula. The use of a distal-flow cannula for circulatory support might reduce the risk of distal limb ischemia.
Databáze: OpenAIRE