Chronic survival of calves implanted with the DeBakey ventricular assist device
Autor: | Don B. Olsen, Bryan E. Lynch, Gregory L. Burns, F. J. Stein, EA Martinez, Matthew W. Miller, Gwendolyn L. Carroll, Eiki Tayama, Deborah Morley, George P. Noon, Robert Benkowski, John F. Edwards, Anders Vinnerqvist, Michael E. DeBakey, Theresa W. Fossum, Joanne N. Franks |
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Rok vydání: | 1999 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Bilirubin medicine.medical_treatment Biomedical Engineering Medicine (miscellaneous) Bioengineering Hemolysis Biomaterials chemistry.chemical_compound White blood cell Occlusion medicine Animals Creatinine Equipment Safety business.industry Sudden cardiac arrest General Medicine Perioperative Equipment Design Surgery Survival Rate medicine.anatomical_structure chemistry Ventricular assist device Anesthesia Cattle Implant Heart-Assist Devices medicine.symptom business |
Zdroj: | Artificial organs. 23(8) |
ISSN: | 0160-564X |
Popis: | The DeBakey ventricular assist device (VAD) is a miniaturized, electromagnetically driven axial flow pump capable of generating in excess of 10 L/min output. The VAD was evaluated in 19 calves during experiments designed to test iterative modifications in the system and to determine the safety of the DeBakey VAD for intermediate to long-term implant. Five of the animals died or were euthanized during the perioperative period (i.e., Days 1-5) due to complications associated with bleeding (n = 3), sudden cardiac arrest (n = 1), or pump occlusion due to a muscle remnant associated with coring (n = 1). The remaining 14 animals survived from 7-145 days. Ten of the 14 animals survived 30 or more days, and 2 animals survived 93 and 145 days before elective euthanasia. Pump function was evaluated in the 14 calves that survived beyond the perioperative period. Pump output at implantation averaged 3 L/min while output at 100 days (n = 2) averaged 4.22 L/min. The electrical current did not change across time during the study, indicating normal operation of the bearings. Pumps consumed less than 10.5 W of power for all support durations. Hemolysis did not occur; the average daily plasma free hemoglobin varied from 2.0 to 8.0 mg/dl. Evaluation of serum biochemical data showed that implantation of the DeBakey VAD in calves with normal hearts did not impair end organ function; BUN, creatinine, and total bilirubin varied minimally within the normal range. The white blood cell count of implanted animals remained within the normal range throughout the study. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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