Literature DB >> 11157579

The use of smaller, more flexible chest drains following open heart surgery : an initial evaluation.

R A Lancey1, C Gaca, T J Vander Salm .   

Abstract

STUDY
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of smaller-caliber drains in patients undergoing open heart surgery.
DESIGN: A retrospective analysis of the medical records and chest radiographs assembled data on total amount of drainage, number of days of drainage, length of postoperative stay, appearance of postoperative chest radiographs, and need for further drainage from either the pleural or pericardial spaces.
SETTING: A large university-based teaching hospital, where > 800 open-heart procedures are performed yearly. PATIENTS AND
INTERVENTIONS: A total of 202 patients underwent standard open heart surgery by one surgeon, and postoperative pleural and pericardial decompression was undertaken using small caliber, more flexible drains connected to bulb suction.
RESULTS: Tubes were left in an average of 2.4 days, with a mean of 826.7 mL collected during that time. The average postoperative length of stay was 6.7 days (median, 5 days). At or before 6-week follow-up, chest radiographs revealed moderate or large effusions in 19 patients (9.4%) in a pleural space that had been drained postoperatively. Twelve patients (5.9%) required an additional postoperative procedure for pleural drainage (eight thoracenteses, four tube thoracostomies). Four patients (2.0%) required reexploration of the pericardium for tamponade.
CONCLUSIONS: Use of smaller-caliber drains have been found at our institution to be an adequate means of decompression of the pleural and pericardial spaces following open heart surgery, with patients rarely having clinically significant pleural effusions at 6-week follow-up.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11157579     DOI: 10.1378/chest.119.1.19

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chest        ISSN: 0012-3692            Impact factor:   9.410


  10 in total

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2.  Plasmatic [corrected] factor XIII reduces severe pleural effusion in children after open-heart surgery.

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7.  Novel Split Chest Tube Improves Post-Surgical Thoracic Drainage.

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8.  Analgesic efficacy of lidocaine and multimodal analgesia for chest tube removal: A randomized trial study.

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9.  Application of the coaxial smart drain in patients with a large air leak following anatomic lung resection: a prospective multicenter phase II analysis of efficacy and safety.

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10.  The effects of pleural fluid drainage on respiratory function in mechanically ventilated patients after cardiac surgery.

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  10 in total

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