s an alternative to cardioplegic arrest, “cardiac surgical conditions” (i.e. a flaccid
            heart which facilitates surgery) have been created by continuously perfusing the coronary
            arteries with normothermic blood and suppressing myocardial chronotropy and inotropy
            with the ultra-short acting ß-blocker esmolol. In contrast to cardioplegic arrest,
            minimal cardiac contraction is maintained. Using this technique, the myocardium is
            protected against ischemia by antegrade coronary blood flow and reduced metabolism.
            In addition, the presence of minimal cardiac contractions protects the myocardium
            against edema formation by maintaining myocardial fluid balance. This paper presents
            both the rationale for and the application of “ß-blocker-induced cardiac surgical
            conditions” as an alternative concept for myocardial protection during coronary artery
            surgery.
         
         
         
            Myocardium - Cardioplegia - Edema - Myocardial protection - Coronary disease