Literature DB >> 14690742

Fast-tracking revisited: routine cardiac surgical patients need minimal intensive care.

M Flynn1, S Reddy, W Shepherd, C Holmes, D Armstrong, C Lunn, K Khan, S Kendall.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Following cardiac surgery, patients are transferred from the operating theatre to intensive care. This clinical environment has one nurse per patient and facilities for mechanical ventilation. Patients are kept in this setting until the following day. This practice has been challenged with early extubation of patients. At our institution we have established a fast-track policy including the following features: (1) patient selection; (2) operating list scheduling with fast-track patients first; (3) anaesthetic tailored to early extubation; (4) methodical procedure with warm cardiopulmonary bypass; (5) removal of the arterial line; (6) transfer from intensive care to a separate high dependency unit ('step-down') on the day of operation, where the ratio of nurse to patient is one to three and there are no ventilatory facilities and no invasive monitoring; or (7) to keep these patients on ICU but decrease the nurse to patient ratio.
METHOD: The case notes of 572 patients who predominantly had myocardial revascularisation, undergoing this process from July 1996 to July 2000 at our institution were reviewed.
RESULTS: Mean EUROSCORE for the study group was 1.42. The 30-day mortality rate for the study group was 0.34%, mean intensive care time was 5 h 52 min, mean time to extubation was 3 h 10 min, mean readmission rate to intensive care was 0.34% and mean hospital stay from day of operation (inclusive) was 5.65 days. This process increased our throughput by 14.6% (compared to standard practices). COMMENT: This study demonstrates that transfer of appropriate patients to a high dependency area from intensive care following cardiac surgery is safe. It allows intensive care beds to be used by more than one patient each day and allows significant cost savings by reducing the nursing ratio per patient.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14690742     DOI: 10.1016/s1010-7940(03)00608-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Cardiothorac Surg        ISSN: 1010-7940            Impact factor:   4.191


  9 in total

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4.  [Leipzig fast-track protocol for cardio-anesthesia. Effective, safe and economical].

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6.  Lessons from the SYNTAX trial.

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7.  A specialized post anaesthetic care unit improves fast-track management in cardiac surgery: a prospective randomized trial.

Authors:  Stefan Probst; Christof Cech; Dirk Haentschel; Markus Scholz; Joerg Ender
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2014-08-15       Impact factor: 9.097

8.  A case-control study of readmission to the intensive care unit after cardiac surgery.

Authors:  Rimantas Benetis; Edmundas Sirvinskas; Birute Kumpaitiene; Sarunas Kinduris
Journal:  Med Sci Monit       Date:  2013-02-28

9.  Risk factor analysis for fast track protocol failure.

Authors:  Arndt H Kiessling; Patrick Huneke; Christian Reyher; Tobias Bingold; Andreas Zierer; Anton Moritz
Journal:  J Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2013-03-15       Impact factor: 1.637

  9 in total

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