European journal of cardio-thoracic surgery : official journal of the European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jan 1995
Survival and quality of life in patients with protracted recovery from cardiac surgery. Can we predict poor outcome?
Of all the 2256 adult cardiac surgical patients operated upon during a 12-month period from 1st February 1992 in three units, only 162 (7.2%) spent more than 48 h in the intensive care unit (ICU) (median 6 days, range 3-90). There were 47 deaths in ICU, 7 more before hospital discharge, and a further 10 before the study end-point of one year after surgery. All 98 1-year survivors were at home with 86 of them reporting their quality of life, on formal evaluation, to be within the reference range which we have established for a less complicated cohort of cardiac surgical patients. ⋯ The algorithm performs well for cardiac surgery patients with a specificity of 98%. If treatment had been withdrawn when death or poor quality of life became predictable, the maximum number of ICU bed days that could be freed was of the order of 2%. The plight of these patients is distressing, but most survive and do well and they are infrequent compared with the large majority who survive to leave hospital after a short ICU stay.
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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jan 1995
Case ReportsEsophageal tracheobronchoplasty for membranous laceration caused by insertion of a dumon stent--maintenance of oxygenation by percutaneous cardiopulmonary support.
A 39-year-old man, whose airway was narrowed due to relapsing polychondritis, sustained a tracheobronchial injury during intubation with an internal stent. In the posterior membranous trachea and left main stem bronchus, a 5-cm longitudinal tear extended across the carina. ⋯ An original esophageal tracheobronchoplasty for repair of the membranous laceration is described. Currently, the patient is asymptomatic 16 months after the surgery.
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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jan 1995
Nitric oxide release during hypothermic versus normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass.
Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) produces hemodynamic and inflammatory disorders involving changes in vascular permeability and regional blood flow and alterations of coagulation and complement systems. It has been reported that an abnormal release of vasoactive substances during CPB, like bradykinin or nitric oxide, could play a role. The aim of this study was to investigate the changes in nitric oxide (NO) release occurring in patients undergoing CPB, under both hypothermic and normothermic conditions. ⋯ Although there were no significant variations of NPL shortly after the start of CPB (10 min after), values measured 30 min after CPB commencement and 10 min after the end of CPB showed a significant increase (P < 0.0001) in both groups. Considering the two groups separately, NPL changes seemed to be similar, so independent of temperature; however, in group B higher values of NPL were measured during (30 min) and after (60 min) CPB (P < 0.0001). In conclusion, during CPB there is a progressive increase, independent of temperature in NO release.
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While lung retransplantation remains the only therapeutic option in early or late graft failure, its value is viewed controversially. Of 134 patients undergoing pulmonary transplantation in our institution, 13 patients underwent 14 redos following heart-lung transplantation (n = 3), bilateral lung transplantation (n = 5), and unilateral lung transplantation (n = 5). Indications for retransplantation were acute graft failure (n = 2), persistent graft dysfunction (n = 3), airway complications (n = 2), and chronic graft failure (n = 7). ⋯ This was slightly lower than in the overall population following primary isolated lung transplantation (83 and 80%). Actuarial freedom from obliterative bronchiolitis (stage 3) at 1 and 2 years was calculated at 88 and 27% (primary grafts: 88% vs 72%; P < 0.05). Retransplantation is a realistic option in early and late graft failure after lung transplantation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jan 1995
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialHaemodynamic and metabolic effects of surface rewarming after coronary revascularization.
Cardiac surgery is often associated with a postoperative increase in the patient's metabolic rate; surface rewarming has been suggested to decrease the energy expenditure by preventing hypothermia. Thirty patients, undergoing coronary revascularization, were randomly divided into two groups; after surgery group A was rewarmed by a new device that acts by both conduction and convection, while group B was just covered with cotton blankets. Blood, oesophagus and skin (thigh and foot) temperatures were recorded on admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) and 30, 60, 90, 180, 270, and 450 min later. ⋯ Group A was also characterized by lower cardiac indices and oxygen consumption. As the occurrence of a dependence of oxygen consumption on delivery could be reasonably ruled out in warmed patients because blood lactate levels were lower than in the controls, we conclude that surface rewarming might have some positive effect in decreasing metabolic demand after cardiac surgery even if the patient's core temperature is little affected. The inhibition of skin temperature receptors could possibly explain this finding.