Factors Associated with Delirium after Cardiac Surgery: A Prospective Cohort Study
The aforementioned risk factors are significantly and independently associated with the presentation of PD. Because some of these factors can be treated or avoided, the results of this study are highly relevant to reduce the risk of this complication and improve the care of patients undergoing cardiac surgery.
The Complex Nature of Emboli Detection During Cardiac Procedures
Certainly, as the letter authors stated, emboli source and delivery during surgical procedures is complex. Multidisciplinary teams are needed to solve this problem. We are glad that a robust body of literature precedes us and that the relatively small but extremely important research community represented by World Journal for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Surgery readers will continue to work together toward improving technology to accurately identify emboli burden and characteristics during cardiac procedures.
Does Postoperative Cognitive Decline after Coronary Bypass Affect Quality of Life?
Postoperative cognitive dysfunction and decreased QoL are common 6 months after surgery, although cognitive function and QoL were found to have improved in many patients at 6 months of follow-up. Impaired cognitive function is not associated with impaired QoL at 6 months.
A Porcine Model of Endothelial Glycocalyx Damage by Enzymatic Digestion: A Pilot Study
EG damage induced by specific enzymes was reflected by temporary changes of biochemical makers together with alteration of microcirculation and changes in fluorescent microscopy of EG layer. Our results support to further validate presented model of EG damage on a larger number of animals.
State of the Art Review: Surgical Treatment of Acute Type A Aortic Dissection
This review provides an overview of the current surgical treatment of ATAAD, focusing on new disease classifications, preoperative computed tomography angiography (CTA) assessment, new prosthesis and stent technologies, and organ-protection strategies.
Association Between the Variability of Cerebral Oxygen Saturation During Cardiopulmonary Bypass and Delayed Postoperative Neurocognitive Recovery in Cardiac Valve Surgical Patients: A Pilot Study
The real variability of rSO2 during the CPB rewarming phase was related to postoperative delayed neurocognitive recovery in patients who underwent cardiac surgery.
Protective Effect of Sevoflurane on Vascular Endothelial Glycocalyx in Patients Undergoing Heart Valve Surgery: A Randomised Controlled Trial
Sevoflurane can decrease glycocalyx degradation in patients undergoing heart valve surgery under cardiopulmonary bypass.
Preoperative Anemia and Transfusion in Cardiac Surgery: A Single-Centre Retrospective Study
Preoperative anemia is present in 15% of patients at our centre and these patients have 53% transfusion rates on surgery day. Hemoglobin concentration, eGFR, BSA, and total cardiopulmonary bypass time were predictors of transfusion on surgery day. Patients had a median of 7 days between initial visit and surgery day. Referral and anemia treatment were infrequently initiated in preoperative anemic patient.
Intranasal Administration of 40 And 80 Units of Insulin Does Not Cause Hypoglycemia During Cardiac Surgery: A Randomized Controlled Trial
In patients with and without T2DM undergoing elective cardiac surgery, intranasal insulin administration at doses as high as 80 IU did not cause clinically important hypoglycemia.
Hemostasis Checklist Reduces Bleeding and Blood Product Consumption After Cardiac Surgery
Implementation of a simple and quickly performed hemostasis checklist has had a sustained impact over the 2 years after implementation, reducing the incidence of noteworthy mediastinal bleeding and reexploration, which has resulted in a major reduction in blood product consumption. Together, these have resulted in an associated reduction in intensive care unit and hospital length of stay, and a considerable financial savings. This highlights that perioperative bleeding is a preventable complication.
Surviving and Thriving 1 Year After Cardiac Surgery: Frailty and Delirium Matter
Preoperative frailty alone did not negatively affect cardiac surgery patients’ functional outcomes up to 1 year, but coexisting frailty and POD led to substantial loss of independence on 3 to 4 ADLs and a 30.2-fold higher likelihood of dying 1 year after surgery. Because frailty led to a 4.9-fold increase in POD risk, frailty may serve as a presurgical screen to identify patients who would likely benefit from delirium prevention and functional recovery programs to maximize 1-year postsurgical outcomes.
Effect of Cytokine Adsorption on Survival and Circulatory Stabilization in Patients Receiving Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Due to small case numbers and the retrospective design of the study, our results neither disprove nor confirm a clinically relevant treatment effect of cytokine adsorption. Results from larger trials, preferably randomized-controlled trials are required to better understand the clinical benefit of cytokine adsorption after ECPR.