Cross-clamp time is an independent predictor of mortality and morbidity in low- and high-risk cardiac patients.
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Authors
Al-Sarraf, NaelThalib, Lukman
Hughes, Anne
Houlihan, Maighread
Tolan, Michael
Young, Vincent
McGovern, Eillish
Affiliation
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, St. James's Hospital, Dublin 8, Ireland. trinityq8@hotmail.comIssue Date
2011-10MeSH
AdultAged
Aged, 80 and over
Aorta
Cardiac Surgical Procedures
Cohort Studies
Constriction
Female
Heart Diseases
Hospital Mortality
Humans
Logistic Models
Male
Middle Aged
Retrospective Studies
Risk Factors
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
Young Adult
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Cross-clamp time is an independent predictor of mortality and morbidity in low- and high-risk cardiac patients. 2011, 9 (1):104-9 Int J SurgJournal
International journal of surgery (London, England)DOI
10.1016/j.ijsu.2010.10.007PubMed ID
20965288Additional Links
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20965288Abstract
We sought to assess the effects of aortic cross-clamp time (XCL) on outcome following cardiac surgery in low- and high-risk patients.This is a retrospective review of prospectively collected departmental data of all patients who underwent cardiac surgery over 8-year period. Our cohort consisted of 3799 consecutive patients subdivided into low-risk (Euro SCORE < 6, n = 2691, 71%) and high-risk (Euro SCORE ≥ 6, n = 1108, 29%). Each class was further stratified into three groups based on their corresponding XCL time. Group 1 (XCL ≤ 60 min), group 2 (XCL > 60 but ≤ 90 min) and group 3 (XCL >90 min). Postoperative morbidity and in-hospital mortality were analysed.
Univariate analysis showed the following to be significantly associated with increased XCL time in both low- and high-risk patients: low cardiac output, prolonged ventilation time, renal complications, prolonged hospital stay, blood transfusion and increased mortality (p < 0.05). By using multiple logistic regression, aortic XCL time >60 min was independent risk factor for low cardiac output, prolonged ventilation, renal complication, blood transfusion, mortality and prolonged hospital stay in both groups. By using XCL time as a continuous variable, an incremental increase of 1 min interval in XCL time was associated with a 2% increase in mortality in both groups.
Prolonged cross-clamp time significantly correlates with major post-operative morbidity and mortality in both low- and high-risk patients. This effect increases with increasing XCL time. Prior knowledge on this effect can help in preventing some of these complications.
Item Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1743-9159ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.ijsu.2010.10.007
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