Literature DB >> 21490084

Factors affecting the decision to defer endotracheal extubation after surgery for congenital heart disease: a prospective observational study.

Nobuhide Kin1, Constance Weismann, Shubhika Srivastava, Sujata Chakravarti, Carol Bodian, Sabera Hossain, Marina Krol, Ingrid Hollinger, Khanh Nguyen, Alexander J C Mittnacht.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Fast-tracking and early endotracheal extubation have been described in patients undergoing surgery for congenital heart disease (CHD); however, criteria for patient selection have not been validated in a prospective manner. Our goal in this study was to prospectively identify factors associated with the decision to defer endotracheal extubation in the operating room (OR).
METHODS: We performed a prospective observational study of 275 patients (median age 18 months) at the Mount Sinai Medical Center (MSMC), New York, New York, and 49 patients (median age 25 months) at the University of Tokyo Hospital (UTH), Tokyo, Japan, undergoing surgery for CHD requiring cardiopulmonary bypass. These patients were all eligible for fast-tracking, including extubation in the OR immediately after surgery, according to the respective inclusion/exclusion criteria applied at the 2 sites.
RESULTS: Eighty-nine percent of patients at the MSMC, and 65% of patients at the UTH were extubated in the OR. At the MSMC, all patients without aortic cross-clamp, and patients with simple procedures (Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery [RACHS] score 1) were extubated in the OR. Among the remaining MSMC patients, regression analysis showed that procedure complexity was still an independent predictor for not proceeding with planned extubation in the OR. Extubation was more likely to be deferred in the RACHS score 3 surgical risk patients compared with the RACHS score 2 group (P = 0.005, odds ratio 3.8 [CI: 1.5, 9.7]). Additionally, trisomy 21 (P = 0.0003, odds ratio 9.9 [CI: 2.9, 34.5]) and age (P = 0.0015) were significant independent predictors for deferring OR extubation. We tested our findings on the patients from the UTH by developing risk categories from the MSMC data that ranked eligible patients according to the chance of OR extubation. The risk categories proved to predict endotracheal extubation in the 49 patients who had undergone surgery at the UTH relative to their overall extubation rate, despite differences in anesthetic regimen and inclusion/exclusion criteria.
CONCLUSIONS: Preoperatively known factors alone can predict the relative chances of deferring extubation after surgery for CHD. The early extubation strategies applied in the 2 centers were successful in the majority of cases.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21490084     DOI: 10.1213/ANE.0b013e31821cd236

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesth Analg        ISSN: 0003-2999            Impact factor:   5.108


  4 in total

1.  Early extubation in pediatric heart surgery across a spectrum of case complexity: Impact on hospital length of stay and chest tube days.

Authors:  Staci Beamer; Sunita Ferns; Lloyd Edwards; Greer Gunther; Jennifer Nelson
Journal:  Prog Pediatr Cardiol       Date:  2016-12-06

2.  Influence of Early Extubation Location on Outcomes Following Pediatric Cardiac Surgery.

Authors:  Sydney R Rooney; Christopher W Mastropietro; Brian Benneyworth; Eric M Graham; Darren Klugman; John Costello; Nancy Ghanayem; Wenying Zhang; Mousumi Banerjee; Michael Gaies
Journal:  Pediatr Crit Care Med       Date:  2020-10       Impact factor: 3.971

3.  An evolving anesthetic protocol fosters fast tracking in pediatric cardiac surgery: A comparison of two anesthetic techniques.

Authors:  Vipul K Sharma; Gaurav Kumar; Saajan Joshi; Nikhil Tiwari; Vivek Kumar; H Ravi Ramamurthy
Journal:  Ann Pediatr Cardiol       Date:  2019-11-01

4.  A retrospective analysis of the duration of mechanical ventilation in Scandinavian paediatric heart centres.

Authors:  Tapio Koski; Heli Salmi; Juho Keski-Nisula; Anders Bille; Einar Björnsson; Casper Jessen; Ronnie Forstholm; Mitja Lääperi; Paula Rautiainen
Journal:  Acta Paediatr       Date:  2022-01-29       Impact factor: 4.056

  4 in total

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