Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Chemical found in medical devices impairs heart function

Chemical found in medical devices impairs heart function

May 01, 2009

Researchers at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine have found that a chemical commonly used in the production of such medical plastic devices as intravenous (IV) bags and catheters can impair heart function in rats. Appearing online this week in the American Journal of Physiology, these new findings suggest a possible new reason for some of the common side effects-loss of taste, short term memory loss-of medical procedures that require blood to be circulated through plastic tubing outside the body, such as heart bypass surgery or kidney dialysis. These findings also have strong implications for the future of medical plastics manufacturing.

In addition to loss of taste and memory, coronary bypass patients often complain of swelling and fatigue. These side effects usually resolve within a few months after surgery, but they are troubling and sometimes hinder recovery.




His personal experience with coronary bypass surgery propelled his search for a root cause for the loss of taste phenomenon, reports principal investigator Artin Shoukas, Ph.D., professor of biomedical engineering, physiology and anesthesiology and critical care medicine at Johns Hopkins. "I'm a chocoholic, and after my bypass surgery everything tasted awful, and chocolate tasted like charcoal for months."

Shoukas and Caitlin Thompson-Torgerson, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in anesthesiology and critical care medicine suspected that the trigger for these side effects might be a chemical compound of some kind.

To test their theory, Shoukas and his team of researchers took liquid samples from IV bags and bypass machines before they were used on patients. The team analyzed the fluids in another machine that can identify unknown chemicals and found the liquid to contain a chemical compound called cyclohexanone. The researchers thought that the cyclohexanone in the fluid samples might have leached from the plastic. Although the amount of cyclohexanone leaching from these devices varied greatly, all fluid samples contained at least some detectable level of the chemical.

The researchers then injected rats with either a salt solution or a salt solution containing cyclohexanone and measured heart function. Rats that got only salt solution pumped approximately 200 microliters of blood per heartbeat and had an average heart rate of 358 beats per minute, while rats injected with cyclohexanone pumped only about 150 microliters of blood per heartbeat with an average heart rate of 287 beats per minute.

In addition to pumping less blood more slowly, rats injected with cyclohexanone had weaker heart contractions. The team calculated that cyclohexanone caused a 50 percent reduction in the strength of each heart contraction. They also found that the reflex that helps control and maintain blood pressure is much less sensitive after cyclohexanone exposure. Finally, the team observed increased fluid retention and swelling in the rats after cyclohexanone injections.

According to Thompson-Torgerson and Shoukas, they would like to figure out how these side effects-decreased heart function and swelling-occur and to what degree cyclohexanone is involved. Despite the findings in this study, they emphasize that patients should listen carefully to the advice of their physicians. "We would never recommend that patients decline this type of treatment if they need it," says Shoukas. "On the contrary, such technologies are life-saving medical advances, and their benefits still far outweigh the risks of the associated side effects. As scientists, we are simply trying to understand how the side effects are triggered and what the best method will be to mitigate, and ultimately remedy, these morbidities."

Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions



Related Cyclohexanone Current Events and Cyclohexanone News Articles
Chemical can reproduce complications for some patients
Medical science took a giant leap forward with the development of techniques that, at least temporarily, perform the function of vital organs.
More Cyclohexanone Current Events and Cyclohexanone News Articles
ISO 1833-21:2006, Textiles - Quantitative chemical analysis - Part 21: Mixtures of chlorofibres, certain modacrylics, certain elastanes, acetates, triacetates ... other fibres (method using cyclohexanone)

ISO 1833-21:2006, Textiles - Quantitative chemical analysis - Part 21: Mixtures of chlorofibres, certain modacrylics, certain elastanes, acetates, triacetates ... other fibres (method using cyclohexanone)
by ISO/TC 38 (Author)

ISO 1833-21:2006 specifies a method, using cyclohexanone, to determine the percentage of chlorofibre, modacrylic, elastane, acetate and triacetate, after removal of non-fibrous matter, in textiles made of binary mixtures of acetate, triacetate, chlorofibre, certain modacrylics, certain elastanes and wool, animal hair, silk, cotton, cupro, modal, viscose, polyamide, acrylic and glass fibre.Where modacrylics or elastanes are present, a preliminary test should be carried out to determine whether the fibre is completely soluble in the reagent.It is also possible to analyse mixtures containing chlorofibres by using the test methods described in ISO 1833-13 or ISO 1833-17. This title may contain less than 24 pages of technical content.

  Schmincke Cyclohexanone Crystals 100g
by Schmincke

Schmincke cyclohexanone is a synthetic substitute for damar in painting medium recipes that call for the natural tree sap.

  CZECH REPUBLIC: Project feasibility study for construction of proposed $230,000,000 cyclohexanone/caprolactam production plant, US TRADE & DEVELOPMENT ... & Plant Operations in the Developing World
by Worldwide Projects, Inc. (Publisher)

This digital document is an article from WWP-Report on Engineering Construct & Plant Operations in the Developing World, published by Worldwide Projects, Inc. on July 1, 2002. The length of the article is 1217 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: CZECH REPUBLIC: Project feasibility study for construction of proposed $230,000,000 cyclohexanone/caprolactam production plant, US TRADE & DEVELOPMENT AGENCY (TDA) & NEXANT INC. [USA] - Order #: 076202.
Publication: WWP-Report on Engineering Construct & Plant Operations in the Developing World (Newsletter)
Date: July...

  CZECH REPUBLIC: Project feasibility study for construction of proposed $230,000,000 cyclohexanone/caprolactam production plant, US TRADE & DEVELOPMENT ... Gas & Petrochemicals in the Developing World
by Worldwide Projects, Inc. (Publisher)

This digital document is an article from WWP- Report on Oil Gas & Petrochemicals in the Developing World, published by Worldwide Projects, Inc. on July 1, 2002. The length of the article is 1217 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: CZECH REPUBLIC: Project feasibility study for construction of proposed $230,000,000 cyclohexanone/caprolactam production plant, US TRADE & DEVELOPMENT AGENCY (TDA) & NEXANT INC. [USA] - Order #: 076202.
Publication: WWP- Report on Oil Gas & Petrochemicals in the Developing World (Magazine/Journal)
Date: July 1, 2002
Publisher:...

  CZECH REPUBLIC: Project feasibility study for construction of proposed $230,000,000 cyclohexanone/caprolactam production plant, US TRADE & DEVELOPMENT ... Opportunities in Eastern Europe & the CIS
by Worldwide Projects, Inc. (Publisher)

This digital document is an article from WWP-Business Opportunities in Eastern Europe & the CIS, published by Worldwide Projects, Inc. on July 1, 2002. The length of the article is 1217 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: CZECH REPUBLIC: Project feasibility study for construction of proposed $230,000,000 cyclohexanone/caprolactam production plant, US TRADE & DEVELOPMENT AGENCY (TDA) & NEXANT INC. [USA] - Order #: 076202.
Publication: WWP-Business Opportunities in Eastern Europe & the CIS (Newsletter)
Date: July 1, 2002
Publisher: Worldwide Projects,...

The preparation of @?-caprolactone in airlift loop sonochemical reactor

The preparation of @?-caprolactone in airlift loop sonochemical reactor
by P. Zhang (Author), M. Yang (Author), X. Lu (Author), P. Han (Author)



  Cyclohexanone and methylcyclohexanone (Methods for the detection of toxic substances in air)
by Great Britain (Author)



  Cyclohexanone (British standard 2711)
by British Standards Institution (Author)



  Development of a pyrolysis method for the preparation of methyl enol ethers of ethyl vinyl ketone, cyclohexanone and cyclopentanine
by Yvonne Dee Barden (Author)



  The preparation of the organic ring compounds chyoloheptanone and 2-(0-methozyphenyl)-cyclohexanone
by Marvin Shulman (Author)



© 2009 BrightSurf.com