Regional blood flow during cross-clamping of the thoracic aorta and infusion of sodium nitroprusside

Academic Article

Abstract

  • Labeled microspheres, 15 μm in diameter, were used to determine cardiac output and regional blood flow response to cross-clamping of the midthoracic aorta and subsequent sodium nitroprusside (SNP) infusion in 11 dogs. During aortic cross-clamping, mean arterial pressure above the occlusion (MAPa) increased 30% to 35%, mean arterial pressure below the occlusion (MAPb) decreased 87%, cardiac index decreased 12% to 14%, left atrial pressure (LAP) doubled, and renal and spinal cord (lower part) blood flows decreased substantially (85% to 94%). SNP infusion returned MAPa to baseline values, decreased MAPb by half, and substantially and further decreased renal blood flow (to 3% to 5% of baseline values). Myocardial and cerebral blood flows increased substantially (up to 250% to 400%). An increase in preload (fluid load) was accompanied by an increase in LAP, cardiac index, and myocardial blood flow only but not in renal or spinal cord flow. There was a strong association between cortical renal blood flow and MAPb (r2 = 0.92; p < 0.0001), which suggests that blood flow through organs and tissues below the occlusion is pressure dependent. The data show that SNP infusion during thoracic aortic cross-clamping improves systemic and regional circulation above the occlusion but decreases MAPb and therefore blood flow below the occlusion. SNP infusion should be used with caution during aortic cross-clamping, since arterial hypotension of any degree may be deleterious to organs below the cross-clamp.
  • Authors

    Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Author List

  • Gelman S; Reves JG; Fowler K; Samuelson PN; Lell WA; Smith LR
  • Start Page

  • 287
  • End Page

  • 291
  • Volume

  • 85
  • Issue

  • 2