Publisher's Synopsis
Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) creates profound changes throughout every organ system in the body, resulting in an unacceptably high number of adverse outcomes, including myocardial infarction, stroke, neuropsychiatric defects, infection, pulmonary dysfunction, and perioperative bleeding. An understanding of the deviations of homeostasis caused by CPB is needed to minimize the frequency of these adverse effects. Rather than examining the vascular endothelium, inflammation, and coagulation "systems" as distinct, this monograph examines the interactions between these three facets of the circulatory system.;It is in these interactions that solutions may be found to the problems that lead to the adverse outcomes of CPB. This monograph also focuses on the complex interactions of vascular homeostasis and how individual reactivity might well drive outcomes. How severely homeostatic control is shaken by CPB greatly affects how a patient does during surgery. This book examines the research that embraces and understands this variability of response and looks to possible future developments that may help clinicians predict how individuals might react to the homeostatic insult that is CPB