Intravenous Anesthetic Protects Diabetics During Heart Surgery
Main Category: Pain / AnestheticsAlso Included In: Diabetes; Heart Disease
Article Date: 05 Dec 2008 - 4:00 PDT
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Diabetics face a much higher risk of complications, including dying following heart surgery, than people without diabetes.
The solution, according to researchers at the University of British Columbia, may be to replace the standard inhaled anesthetic with one that is delivered intravenously at a particular time during surgery. Now half way through a CIHR-supported clinical trial of 144 patients at Vancouver General Hospital, the results are very promising.
"We are very excited by this," says lead researcher, Dr. David Ansley. "We have evidence that intravenous drugs delivered in a specific way are more helpful than inhaled." The Canadian team is among only a few in the world studying how anesthesia protects the heart. It is the only group studying this novel use of intravenous anesthetic.
Did you know? People with diabetes have a high risk of coronary artery disease and make up at least 25% of patients undergoing heart surgery.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
The CIHR is the Government of Canada's health research funding agency, and is involved in׃
-- Supporting the work of more than 11,000 researchers and trainees in universities, teaching hospitals, and research institutes across Canada
-- Developing high-quality people, excellent science and training the next generation of health researchers
-- Funding research that improves Canadians' health, health care system and quality of life
-- Fostering commercialization, moving research discoveries from academic setting to the marketplace
-- Allocating 94 cents of every dollar directly to fund Canadian health researchers
Source
David Coulombe
Media Relations
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
http://cihr-irsc.gc.ca
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