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Original Article

Forty-one Variables Following Thoracotomy in Calves

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Pages 245-272 | Published online: 11 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Seven calves underwent thoracotomy to study the response of 41 physiologic variables over a 14 day post-operative period for comparison to a recent series of left ventricular bypass pump implants. The experimental protocols were identical to the pump implant protocols except that the sham operated animals did not receive antiplatelet or anticoagulant drugs and the pumps were not implanted. Of the 41 variables studied, 13 changed significantly during the post-operative period. Heart rate, hematocrit, whole blood hemoglobin, and fibrinogen concentration decreased, while fibrinogen survival, stroke volume, cardiac output, arterial blood pH, pCO2 and pO2, plasma sodium concentration, and urinary excretion rates of sodium and potassium increased from the first or second to the fourteenth post-operative day. Heart rate and hematocrit also decreased in the recent series of 18 animals in which left ventricular bypass pumps were implanted. The decrease in heart rate is toward the unoperated control value as the calves recover from the operative stress. The decrease in hematocrit is probably the result of daily removal of blood for the physiologic studies because there was no evidence of hemorrhage or red blood cell destruction.

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