European journal of anaesthesiology
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Observational Study
Urinary neprilysin for early detection of acute kidney injury after cardiac surgery: A prospective observational study.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) predicts adverse outcomes after cardiac surgery. The accuracy of using changes in serum creatinine for diagnosis and grading of AKI is limited in the peri-operative cardiac surgical setting and AKI may be underdiagnosed due to haemodilution from cardiopulmonary bypass priming and the need for intra-operative and postoperative volume resuscitation. ⋯ Urinary neprilysin has potential as a biomarker for the early detection of AKI after cardiac surgery and has comparable discriminatory power to recently studied AKI biomarkers.
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Observational Study
Peri-operative oxygen consumption revisited: An observational study in elderly patients undergoing major abdominal surgery.
Monitoring oxygen consumption (VO2) is neither recommended nor included in peri-operative haemodynamic algorithms aiming at optimising oxygen delivery (DO2) in major abdominal surgery. Estimates of peri-operative VO2 changes are uncertain in earlier publications and have limited generalisability in the current high-risk surgical population. In a prospective non-interventional observational study in elderly patients undergoing major abdominal procedures, we investigated the change of VO2 after induction of anaesthesia and secondarily, the further changes during and after surgery in relation to DO2 and estimated oxygen extraction ratio (O2ER) by routine monitoring. ⋯ General anaesthesia reduced VO2 by approximately a third in elderly patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. Parallel changes of intra-operative VO2 and delivery were demonstrated while oxygen extraction was low. The relevance of these changes needs further assessment in relation to outcomes and haemodynamic interventions.
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Variable assisted mechanical ventilation has been shown to improve lung function and reduce lung injury. However, differences between extrinsic and intrinsic variability are unknown. ⋯ Noisy PSV and NAVA did not reduce global lung injury compared with PCV but affected different biomarkers and attenuated diaphragmatic atrophy. NAVA increased the respiratory variability; however, NAVA yielded a similar SVA incidence as Noisy PSV.
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Observational Study
Effects on cerebral blood flow of position changes, hyperoxia, CO2 partial pressure variations and the Valsalva manoeuvre: A study in healthy volunteers.
Maintaining adequate blood pressure to ensure proper cerebral blood flow (CBF) during surgery is challenging. Induced mild hypotension, sitting position or unavoidable intra-operative circumstances such as haemorrhage, added to variations in carbon dioxide and oxygen tensions, may influence perfusion. Several of these circumstances may coincide and it is unclear how these may affect CBF. ⋯ CBF changes in response to cerebral vasoconstriction and vasodilatation were detected with rSO2 and transcranial Doppler in healthy volunteers during cardiac preload and in different body positions. Acute hypercapnia had a greater effect on recorded brain parameters than hypocapnia.