1. Monitoring Brain Oxygen Saturation During Coronary Bypass Surgery: A Randomized, Prospective Study
- Author
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Andrew Cleland, Stephanie A. Fox, Betsy Schaefer, Richard J. Novick, Ivan Iglesias, Beverly Irwin, John M. Murkin, Daniel Bainbridge, Mackenzie A. Quantz, and Sandra J Adams
- Subjects
Adult ,Carotid Artery Diseases ,Myocardial Infarction ,Cerebral oxygen saturation ,law.invention ,Oxygen Consumption ,law ,Monitoring, Intraoperative ,Cardiopulmonary bypass ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Derivation ,Myocardial infarction ,Coronary Artery Bypass ,Prospective cohort study ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,Oxygen saturation (medicine) ,Cardiopulmonary Bypass ,Informed Consent ,Intraoperative Care ,business.industry ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Bypass surgery ,Anesthesia ,business ,Artery - Abstract
Cerebral deoxygenation is associated with various adverse systemic outcomes. We hypothesized, by using the brain as an index organ, that interventions to improve cerebral oxygenation would have systemic benefits in cardiac surgical patients.Two-hundred coronary artery bypass patients were randomized to either intraoperative cerebral regional oxygen saturation (rSO2) monitoring with active display and treatment intervention protocol (intervention, n = 100), or underwent blinded rSO2 monitoring (control, n = 100). Predefined clinical outcomes were assessed by a blinded observer.Significantly more patients in the control group demonstrated prolonged cerebral desaturation (P = 0.014) and longer duration in the intensive care unit (P = 0.029) versus intervention patients. There was no difference in overall incidence of adverse complications, but significantly more control patients had major organ morbidity or mortality (death, ventilation48 h, stroke, myocardial infarction, return for re-exploration) versus intervention group patients (P = 0.048). Patients experiencing major organ morbidity or mortality had lower baseline and mean rSO2, more cerebral desaturations and longer lengths of stay in the intensive care unit and postoperative hospitalization, than patients without such complications. There was a significant (r(2) = 0.29) inverse correlation between intraoperative rSO2 and duration of postoperative hospitalization in patients requiringor =10 days postoperative length of stay.Monitoring cerebral rSO2 in coronary artery bypass patients avoids profound cerebral desaturation and is associated with significantly fewer incidences of major organ dysfunction.
- Published
- 2007