Reduction of blood transfusion requirement in open heart surgery by administration of high doses of aprotinin--preliminary results
- PMID: 2471287
- DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1013914
Reduction of blood transfusion requirement in open heart surgery by administration of high doses of aprotinin--preliminary results
Abstract
Reduction of homologous blood requirement in cardiac surgery is of increasing interest and may be achieved by various technical and pharmacological means. High-dose aprotinin (about 840 mg, equivalent to 6 million Kallikrein inactivator units), a serine proteinase inhibitor, was administered during open heart surgery to 60 patients refusing homologous blood transfusions or suspected to have an increased risk of bleeding. As a significant decrease in donor blood requirement could be observed, a prospective, randomised double blind study in 80 male patients undergoing primary coronary surgery with high-dose aprotinin administration was performed. Mean blood loss was reduced by 45.9% (652 ml in the treated vs 1204 ml in the untreated group, p less than 0.01) and the mean amount transfused was decreased by 74.2% (242 ml vs 937 ml, p less than 0.01). No homologous blood was needed in 57.9% of the aprotinin-treated patients and in 31.6% of patients not treated with aprotinin.
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