| Literature DB >> 33670210 |
Sarah E Drennan1, Kathryn Y Burge1, Edgardo G Szyld1, Jeffrey V Eckert1, Arshid M Mir2, Andrew K Gormley3, Randall M Schwartz4, Suanne M Daves4, Jess L Thompson5, Harold M Burkhart5, Hala Chaaban1.
Abstract
Cardiac surgery employing cardiopulmonary bypass exposes infants to a high risk of morbidity and mortality. The objective of this study was to assess the utility of clinical and laboratory variables to predict the development of low cardiac output syndrome, a frequent complication following cardiac surgery in infants. We performed a prospective observational study in the pediatric cardiovascular ICU in an academic children's hospital. Thirty-one patients with congenital heart disease were included. Serum levels of nucleosomes and a panel of 20 cytokines were measured at six time points in the perioperative period. Cardiopulmonary bypass patients were characterized by increased levels of interleukin-10, -6, and -1α upon admission to the ICU compared to non-bypass cardiac patients. Patients developing low cardiac output syndrome endured longer aortic cross-clamp time and required greater inotropic support at 12 h postoperatively compared to bypass patients not developing the condition. Higher preoperative interleukin-10 levels and 24 h postoperative interleukin-8 levels were associated with low cardiac output syndrome. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis demonstrated a moderate capability of aortic cross-clamp duration to predict low cardiac output syndrome but not IL-8. In conclusion, low cardiac output syndrome was best predicted in our patient population by the surgical metric of aortic cross-clamp duration.Entities:
Keywords: cardiopulmonary bypass; congenital heart disease; inflammation; low cardiac output syndrome; pediatric cardiology
Year: 2021 PMID: 33670210 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10040712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241