Hemodynamic evaluation of anesthetized baboons and piglets by transpulmonary thermodilution: Normal values and interspecies differences with respect to xenotransplantation.
Matthias LänginMark KonradBruno ReichartTanja MayrStephanie VandewieleJohannes PostrachMaren MokelkeJulia RadanPaolo BrennerAndreas BauerJan-Michael AbichtPublished in: Xenotransplantation (2019)
Parameters of preload, afterload, and contractility differ between baboons and piglets. In particular, baboons have a much higher afterload than piglets, which might be instrumental in causing perioperative xenograft dysfunction and post-operative myocardial hypertrophy after orthotopic pig-to-baboon cardiac xenotransplantation. Most transpulmonary thermodilution-derived parameters obtained from healthy piglets and baboons lie outside the reference ranges for humans, so human normal values should not be used to guide treatment in those animals. Our data provide reference values as a basis for developing algorithms for perioperative hemodynamic management in pig-to-baboon cardiac xenotransplantation.