From the Spinning Disc to the Membrane Oxygenator for Open-Heart Surgery

Abstract
Gibbon''s rotating cylinder could not be enlarged to oxygenate an animal larger than a cat. The spinning disc oxygenator, introduced in 1947, had the capacity to perfuse a dog and the potential to increase oxygenation capacity by addition of more discs. When centers began to do three to four open-heart operations per day, the disposable bubble oxygenator was more practical. Bubble size was optimized to decrease the flow of oxygen relative to the blood flow and reduce trauma to blood. The bubble oxygenator is the type most commonly used today. Use of deep hypothermia with whole blood at an esophageal temperature of 10 .degree. C was initially complicated by brain damage due to aggregation of white blood corpuscles and platelets. The introduction of hemodilution permitted safe utilization of hypothermic perfusion. Perfusion of infants should not be carried out at hematocrit below 25 ml/100 m. Early membrane oxygenators used nonporous silicone, or modified silicone membranes. High priming volumes, high pressure drop and marginal gas transfer efficiency characterized these devices. Recent advances in membrane technology have spawned a new generation of membrane oxygenators utilizing microporous polypropylene. In these new oxygenators, with either microporous hollow or sheet membrane, gas transfer characteristics are far superior to those of types produced in the past. The hollow-fiber devices typically have larger surface areas and higher pressure drop than in the new state-of-the-art flat plate models. An evaluation of one of these new-generation membrane oxygenators gave optimal oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange at a gas flow of 1 l/min of 60% oxygen in air at 30.degree. C and 2 l/min of 80% oxygen in air at normal temperature and rewarming for an adult. Today, after almost 40 years of oxygenator development, these new membrane devices can offer better platelet preservation and reduced blood trauma is compared with types developed in the past. The new membrane oxygenators are fast becoming the preferred choice for use in infants and in protracted perfusion.

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