ARTICLE
TITLE

Lactic Acidosis after Cardiac Surgery Is Associated with Adverse Outcome

SUMMARY

Background: The accurate identification of patients who have the potential to further deteriorate after cardiac surgery is difficult. Elevated serum lactate level after cardiac surgery is an indicator of systemic hypoperfusion and tissue hypoxia. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of increased serum lactate on outcome after on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting.Methods: Serum lactate level was measured in 776 patients within half an hour after surgery. Lactate level was less than or equal to 2 mmol/L in 534 patients (low lactate group) and more than 2 mmol/L in 242 patients (high lactate group). Continuous variables were analyzed with the Student t test. The ?2 test and Fisher exact test were used to compare categorical variables.Results: Demographic characteristics and details of surgery were similar in both groups. Increased cross-clamp and cardiopulmonary bypass times and highly positive fluid balance at the end of surgery were associated with a significant rise in postoperative lactate levels, which leads to increased need for intraaortic balloon pump support (odds ration [OR], 5.9, P = .006), increased likelihood of >24 h intensive care unit stay (OR, 3.4, P = .0001), greater need for red blood cell transfusion (OR, 1.6, P = .002), increased length of hospital stay, and higher mortality rates (OR, 5.6, P = .04).Conclusions: This study has demonstrated that elevated blood lactate level is associated with adverse outcome, and monitoring the blood lactate level during and after cardiac surgery is a valuable tool in identifying the patients who have the potential to deteriorate.

 Articles related

Kaan Kirali, Denyan Mansuro glu, Nihan Kayalar, Füsun Güzelmeriç, Mete Alp, Cevat Yakut    

Background: The purpose of this study was to use serum markers for myocardial tissue damage to evaluate the effect of the severity of left anterior descending artery (LAD) lesions after 1-vessel off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting. Methods: A consec... see more


Sylvio M. A. Gandra, Luiz A. Rivetti    

Background: Our center has been performing beating heart coronary artery bypass grafting with a temporary intraluminal shunt since 1983. Based on our clinical observations of more than 846 surgical cases, we believe that a temporary intraluminal shunt (T... see more


Juerg Peter Mueller, Andreas Kuenzli, Oliver Reuthebuch, Kurt Dasse, Stella Kent, Gregor Zuend, Marko Ivan Turina, Mario Louis Lachat    

Purpose: Blood pumps are routinely used for circulatory and pulmonary support. However, blood trauma and pump failure remain severe drawbacks of currently available pump models. This study evaluated the first clinical application of a new, totally bearin... see more


Johannes Mair, Angelika Hammerer-Lercher    

All novel markers of myocardial ischemia (ischemia-modified albumin, choline, unbound free fatty acids) lack cardiac specificity. Therefore, for the specific detection of myocardial ischemia selective blood sampling from an inserted coronary sinus cathet... see more


Onur Sokullu, Soner Sanio?lu, Erol Kurç, Murat Sargin, Hayati Deniz, Zeynep Tartan, Serap Aykut Aka, Fuat Bilgen    

Background: Melatonin is a potent scavenger of free radicals and an antioxidant. We studied the relationship between the protective effect of melatonin against ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) during cardiopulmonary bypass, the plasma level of melatonin... see more