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A prospective randomized study to evaluate the renoprotective action of beating heart coronary surgery in low risk patients

A prospective randomized study to evaluate the renoprotective action of beating heart coronary surgery in low risk patients
A prospective randomized study to evaluate the renoprotective action of beating heart coronary surgery in low risk patients
Objectives: cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is widely regarded as an important contributor to renal failure, a well recognized complication following coronary artery surgery (coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG)). Anecdotally off-pump coronary surgery (OPCAB) is considered renoprotective. We examine the extent of renal glomerular and tubular injury in low-risk patients undergoing either OPCAB or on-pump coronary artery bypass (ONCAB).
Methods: forty low-risk patients with normal preoperative cardiac and renal functions awaiting elective CABG were prospectively randomized into those undergoing OPCAB (n=20) and ONCAB (n=20). Glomerular and tubular injury were measured respectively by urinary excretion of microalbumin and retinol binding protein (RBP) indexed to creatinine (Cr). Daily measurements were taken from admission to postoperative day 5. Fluid balance, serum Cr and blood urea were also monitored.
Results: no mortality or renal complication were observed. Both groups had similar demographic makeup, Parsonnet score, functional status and extent of coronary revascularization (2.1±1.0 vs. 2.5±0.7 grafts; P=0.08). Serum Cr and blood urea remained normal in both groups throughout the study. A significant and similar rise in urinary RBP:Cr occurred in both groups peaking on day 1 (3183±2534 vs. 4035±4079; P=0.43) before reapproximating baseline levels. These trends were also observed with urinary microalbumin:Cr (5.05±2.66 vs. 6.77±5.76; P=0.22). Group B patients had a significantly more negative fluid balance on postoperative day 2 (?183±1118 vs. 637±847 ml; P=0.03).
Conclusions: although renal complication or serum markers of kidney dysfunction were absent, sensitive indicators revealed significant and similar injury to renal tubules and glomeruli following either OPCAB or ONCAB. These results suggest that avoidance of CPB does not offer additional renoprotection to patients at low risk of perioperative renal insult during CABG.
cardiopulmonary bypass, pulsatile flow, renal injury, off-pump, myocardial revascularization
1010-7940
118-123
Tang, A.T.M.
e03fc6de-f019-4ad6-b5f5-711c109f52d1
Knott, J.
6d026827-e4be-4d5a-a556-5aa76d960bbe
Nanson, J.
fa2d2ed5-949f-4d21-a6d8-09e78dcfac7a
Hsu, J.
e461e730-65b9-4fbd-a56e-a6499b9fd3df
Haw, M.P.
2b6001b8-3b36-4408-a185-322bbdd6e730
Ohri, S.K.
8aa5698c-78cf-4f59-a5af-5afa46f0348c
Tang, A.T.M.
e03fc6de-f019-4ad6-b5f5-711c109f52d1
Knott, J.
6d026827-e4be-4d5a-a556-5aa76d960bbe
Nanson, J.
fa2d2ed5-949f-4d21-a6d8-09e78dcfac7a
Hsu, J.
e461e730-65b9-4fbd-a56e-a6499b9fd3df
Haw, M.P.
2b6001b8-3b36-4408-a185-322bbdd6e730
Ohri, S.K.
8aa5698c-78cf-4f59-a5af-5afa46f0348c

Tang, A.T.M., Knott, J., Nanson, J., Hsu, J., Haw, M.P. and Ohri, S.K. (2002) A prospective randomized study to evaluate the renoprotective action of beating heart coronary surgery in low risk patients. European Journal of Cardio-thoracic Surgery, 22 (1), 118-123. (doi:10.1016/S1010-7940(02)00220-8).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is widely regarded as an important contributor to renal failure, a well recognized complication following coronary artery surgery (coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG)). Anecdotally off-pump coronary surgery (OPCAB) is considered renoprotective. We examine the extent of renal glomerular and tubular injury in low-risk patients undergoing either OPCAB or on-pump coronary artery bypass (ONCAB).
Methods: forty low-risk patients with normal preoperative cardiac and renal functions awaiting elective CABG were prospectively randomized into those undergoing OPCAB (n=20) and ONCAB (n=20). Glomerular and tubular injury were measured respectively by urinary excretion of microalbumin and retinol binding protein (RBP) indexed to creatinine (Cr). Daily measurements were taken from admission to postoperative day 5. Fluid balance, serum Cr and blood urea were also monitored.
Results: no mortality or renal complication were observed. Both groups had similar demographic makeup, Parsonnet score, functional status and extent of coronary revascularization (2.1±1.0 vs. 2.5±0.7 grafts; P=0.08). Serum Cr and blood urea remained normal in both groups throughout the study. A significant and similar rise in urinary RBP:Cr occurred in both groups peaking on day 1 (3183±2534 vs. 4035±4079; P=0.43) before reapproximating baseline levels. These trends were also observed with urinary microalbumin:Cr (5.05±2.66 vs. 6.77±5.76; P=0.22). Group B patients had a significantly more negative fluid balance on postoperative day 2 (?183±1118 vs. 637±847 ml; P=0.03).
Conclusions: although renal complication or serum markers of kidney dysfunction were absent, sensitive indicators revealed significant and similar injury to renal tubules and glomeruli following either OPCAB or ONCAB. These results suggest that avoidance of CPB does not offer additional renoprotection to patients at low risk of perioperative renal insult during CABG.

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More information

Published date: 2002
Keywords: cardiopulmonary bypass, pulsatile flow, renal injury, off-pump, myocardial revascularization

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 26013
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/26013
ISSN: 1010-7940
PURE UUID: 168772e3-6cfd-4bf4-875c-d0be058911f7

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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:07

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Contributors

Author: A.T.M. Tang
Author: J. Knott
Author: J. Nanson
Author: J. Hsu
Author: M.P. Haw
Author: S.K. Ohri

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