Predictors of gastrointestinal complications in cardiac surgery.
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- Vol. 27 (2) , 93-9
Abstract
Gastrointestinal problems are infrequent but serious complications of cardiac surgery, with high rates of morbidity and mortality. Predictors of these complications are not well developed, and the role of fundamental variables remains controversial. In a retrospective review of our cardiac surgery experience from July 1991 through December 1997 we found that postoperative gastrointestinal complications were diagnosed in 86 of 4,463 consecutive patients (1.9%). We categorized these 86 patients into 2 groups--Surgical and Medical--according to the method of treatment used for their complications. In the Medical group, 9 of 52 patients (17%) died; in the Surgical group, 17 of 34 (50%) died. By logistic multivariate analysis, we identified 8 parameters that predicted gastrointestinal complications: age greater than 70 years, duration of cardiopulmonary bypass, need for blood transfusions, reoperation, triple-vessel disease, New York Heart Association functional class IV, peripheral vascular disease, and congestive heart failure. Postoperative re-exploration for bleeding was a predictor specific to the Surgical group. Use of an intraaortic balloon pump was markedly higher in the Gastrointestinal group than in the Control group (30% vs 10%, respectively), as was the use of inotropic support in the immediate postoperative period (27% vs 5.6%). Our results suggest that intra-abdominal ischemic injury is a likely contributing factor in most gastrointestinal complications. In turn, the ischemia is probably caused by hypoperfusion due to low cardiac output, hypotension due to blood loss, and intra-abdominal atheroemboli. The derived models are useful for identifying patients whose risk of gastrointestinal complications after cardiac surgery may be reduced by clinical measures designed to counter these mechanisms.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gastrointestinal complications after cardiac surgeryEuropean Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, 1996
- Gastrointestinal complications following cardiac surgeryCardiovascular Surgery, 1995
- General Surgical Complications Can Be Predicted After Cardiopulmonary BypassAnnals of Surgery, 1995
- Postoperative Visceral Hypotension the Common Cause for Gastrointestinal Complications after Cardiac SurgeryThe Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon, 1994
- Cardiopulmonary bypass impairs small intestinal transport and increases cut permeabilityThe Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1993
- The role of the gut in the development of multiple organ dysfunction in cardiothoracic patientsThe Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1993
- Intraabdominal complications after cardiopulmonary bypassThe Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1991
- Gut barrier function and the surgeonBritish Journal of Surgery, 1990
- Hyperamylasemia After Cardiac SurgeryAnnals of Surgery, 1989
- The acute abdomen following cardiopulmonary bypass surgeryBritish Journal of Surgery, 1980