Purpose of the Study. Aprotinin is a non-specific inhibitor of serine proteases with hemostyptic and hemostatic properties.
The effect covers suppression of fibrinolysis and support of the role of thrombocytes in coagulation. In a prospective randomized study we verified whether the application of aprotinin (Antilysin Spofa, Czech Republic) in the dosage effective in cardiosurgical patients reduces blood loss and the need for blood transfusion for orthopaedic patients.
Material. 42 patients indicated to the primary THA were randomly selected into the study and control groups. Excluded were allergic patients and those who used aprotinin before.
Methods. Administration of 2.106 KIU of aprotinin was started preoperatively and is continued in the course of the first hour of surgery.
In the operated on patients we recorded prior to operation and in the first post-operative morning the level of hemoglobin in blood and hematocrit, the number of infusions and blood transfusion units administered in the course of the surgery and in the post-operative period until the first post-operative morning. We recorded blood loss in the period between the surgery and the first post-operative morning.
Data acquired in the patients of the studied and control groups were compared by means of ANOVA test for repeated measuring and with the use of Mann-Whitney and χ2-test, the level of significance p <= 0,05. During the hospitalization we the patients were checked for symptoms of deep venous trombosis and tromboembolic or other adverse events.
Results. Hemoglobinemia and hematocrit in both groups significantly decreased after the operation (p<0,0005), the differences between the studied and control groups were not significant.
The number of administered blood units did not differ in the examined and control groups. The frequency of blood transfusions was postoperatively higher in the control group (59,1% as compared to 30%), however, the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0,059).
Blood loss in the post-operative period was higher in the control group (p = 0,048). Patients from the control group got in total blood transfusion more frequently (p = 0,032).
Differences in the total frequency of blood transfusion and in the amount of post-operative blood loss were stastically significant. In the course of hospitalisation no signs of deep phlebothrombosis or tromboembolic condition were encountered in either group of patients.
Complications were not recorded. Discussion.
Our results correspond with most of the published data. Blood loss of the operated on patients who were administered prior to and at the beginning of the operation in total 2.106 KIU of aprotinin (Antilysin Spofa) in infusion was on average by 33% less in the post-operative period and in the whole peropetive period they required less frequently blood transfusion (40% vs 73%).
Conclusion. Infusion of aprotinin (Antilysin Spofa) in the dosage of the order of 106 KIU significantly reduces post-operative blood loss and frequency of transfusion in the peroperative period in patients undergoing THA.