This initial report from J-MACS focuses on patients' demographics, device types, survival, competing outcomes, adverse events and successful examples of system failure detection.
We investigated changes in vasoconstrictive function accompanying prolonged nonpulsatile left heart bypass (NLHB). After 2-week pulsatile left heart bypass (PLHB) in 11 goats, NLHB was conducted for another 4 weeks (Group N) in 6 goats. In the other 5 goats, PLHB was continued for another 4 weeks (Group P). Systemic vascular resistance at rest (rSVR) was measured on the last days of the second and sixth postoperative week (W2 and W6, respectively). Subsequently, phenylephrine was injected, and the maximum values (SVRmax) and the maximum increasing change in SVR (DeltaSVR) were measured. No significant difference was observed in rSVR between groups at W2 or W6. The SVRmax and the DeltaSVR at W2 were consistent in both groups. However, at W6, the SVRmax and the DeltaSVR of Group N were significantly lower than those of Group P. In conclusion, prolonged NLHB caused a significant decrease in the SVR response to phenylephrine, indicating a dimunition of vasoconstrictive function.
The method of measuring the flow rate of a centrifugal blood pump from the input electric power, which will be indispensable for the long-term use of such devices, was developed and was applied to the direct-driven centrifugal blood pump that has been developed by our research group. The accuracy was evaluated in a chronic animal experiment using an adult goat. The results demonstrated that this method carries the sufficient potential of the instantaneous monitoring method, but errors due to electromagnetic and mechanical losses were not determined always precisely. The detection of adverse phenomena such as the obstruction of the inlet cannula was also possible from the estimated value of the flow rate and its waveform pattern.
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