View clinical trials related to Cardiac Surgery.
Filter by:After cardiac surgery, patients' follow-up after discharge is a major public health issue. Since the main complications occur mostly during the first extra-hospital month, a follow-up period becomes necessary as the average duration of hospitalization tends to decrease. The resumption of normal physical activity is rarely transmitted and when complications arise, the healthcare team is most often informed late. An electronic wristband is worn by the patient during the day, between the day of discharge from the hospital (D0) and the end of the second extra-hospital month (D60). The data recorded by the wristband include : bracelet ID, date, time and number of steps per day. The primary objective of the study is to measure the resumption of physical activity after elective cardiac surgery. This objective will be quantified by the number of daily footsteps. A secondary objective is to determine perioperative predictors of the physical resumption.
The study consist of evaluation in cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) setting the ability of PCO2 derived variables (ΔPCO2, ΔPCO2/C(a-v)O2 ratio), compared to lactate and ScVO2 to predict major postoperative adverse events.
Hypothesis: Dilutional thrombocytopenia after cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is universal and administration of donor apheresis platelets just prior to termination of bypass will assist in early correction of coagulopathy, early hemostasis and lesser donor exposure of blood products after cardiac surgery. Background: What is the Problem? - Bleeding, Transfusion and Outcomes 1. Excessive bleeding after neonatal cardiac surgery has been independently associated with increased adverse events, morbidity and mortality.1,2 Bleeding after neonatal open-heart surgery has multiple etiologies such as immaturity of the building blocks of coagulation, effects of deep hypothermia, longer CPB times, altered flow states and dilutional state induced by being on CPB leading to low platelet count, low platelet function, low fibrinogen levels, altered fibrinogen polymerization, complement activation, etc.2,3 The strongest predictor of transfusion after cardiopulmonary bypass in children was deemed to be the CPB circuit volume and the effect of hemodilution.4 2. The dilutional coagulopathy after neonatal CPB requires intense damage control resuscitation with massive transfusion of platelets, packed red blood cells (PRBC), cryoprecipitate, fresh frozen plasma (FFP) and supplemental factor concentrates. In a previous study at this institution (IRB# HSC-MS-13-0647), we have shown that in neonates undergoing open-heart surgery there was a significant drop in platelet counts after bypass (71% change, baseline= 268 ± 90, Post CPB= 76 ± 27, 109/L). Associated with this drop , the average intraoperative transfusion load in neonates undergoing cardiac surgery with CPB at our institution constitutes of PRBC= 63± 43 ml/kg, FFP=51± 21 ml/kg, cryoprecipitate =12+6 ml/kg, platelets = 28 +16 ml/kg and cell-saver =27± 10 ml/kg. In addition 72% of these patients were exposed to a 3-factor prothrombin complex concentrate (Bebulin®). Although this "throw the kitchen sink" approach is effective in achieving hemostasis, it comes with significant effects on post CPB hemodynamics, constantly changing hematocrit, variable blood volume with inability to achieve steady state inotropic state affecting cardiac output, oxygen delivery and adding to pulmonary hypertension. Overall, having higher platelet counts at the time of weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass has distinct advantages of reducing transfusions and improving outcomes.
The Quantra™ System is a novel point-of-care diagnostic device designed to perform whole blood coagulation analysis. This study compares Quantra measurements determined in arterial versus venous blood samples obtained from patients undergoing cardiac surgery.
The primary objective for this retrospective Electronic Health Record (EHR) analysis is to evaluate the clinical outcomes associated with the utilization of a pulmonary artery catheter (PAC), for monitoring purposes, within patients undergoing cardiac surgeries (isolated coronary artery bypass graft [CABG], valve, aortic surgery, multi-procedures, other complex nonvalvular procedures and heart transplants). The study will be conducted using prospectively collected hospital inpatient data over a duration of over 5 years (Jan. 1, 2010 - June 30, 2015) using a large US electronic health database (Cerner HealthFacts; Kansas City, MO).
Postoperative erythrocytes transfusion is associated with morbidity and excess mortality, which should lead to ask the indication for RBC transfusions only on metabolic needs. Currently, the majority of studies used to put hemoglobin values indicating red cell transfusions. Two observational studies have confirmed that a transfusion strategy based on a metabolic index (ScvO2) individual was accompanied by a different transfusion strategy than using the hemoglobin threshold values. We propose to conduct the first randomized multicenter study to evaluate erythrocyte transfusion strategy in postoperative cardiac surgery using the ScvO2 each patient versus a threshold value usually recommended for all patients.
Best priming for cardiopulmonary bypass in cardiac surgery is unknown. Efficacy and toxicity of Hydroxyethyl Starch 130/0.4 used in this context are uncertain. The aim of this pilot study is to determine if Hydroxyethyl Starch 130/0.4 is more effective than Sodium Chloride 0.9% in short term hemodynamic purpose without side renal or hemostatic effect.
The economic burden of health care is becoming a greater burden from year to year. Medicare spending, which represented 20 percent of national health spending in 2013, grew 3.4 percent to $585.7 billion, a slowdown from growth of 4.0 percent in 2012. This slowdown was attributed largely to slower enrollment growth and impacts of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and sequestration. Per-enrollee spending in 2013 grew at about the same rate as 2012. The push to create Accountable Care Organizations (ACO) has taken these initiatives a step further. The goal would be to move away from a fee for service system and base reimbursement on quality of care. Clinical metrics, re-admissions, and patient satisfaction in categories of acute myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, pneumonia, surgeries and healthcare associated infections will be the foci for 2013. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has also initiated a valve bundled payment system that encompasses total patient care for 90 days, including readmissions. Leapfrog and the ACO movement along with the nonprofit group Institute for Health Care Improvement have placed quality and cost effectiveness into the spotlight for clinicians in the ICU and beyond. While clinicians have always been focused on evidence based therapies with little concern for cost, in the new era of healthcare understanding cost, value and effectiveness of therapies will be key for improved patient outcomes and institutional solvency in trying economic times. Vanderbilt elected to enroll in the CMS valve bundle trial. The Leadership team in the heart and vascular institute identified the importance of an electronic medical record that includes display and utilization of key drivers of quality and success across the continuum of care (Preoperative assessment to discharge up to 90 days) in the bundled payment model of care. A multidisciplinary team was developed in conjunction with nurses, midlevel providers, multi-specialty physicians, case managers, informatics specialists, and performance improvement representatives to develop an electronic pathway of care using evidence based and best practices for cardiac surgery.
Heart surgery is a considerable source of stress for the myocardium that must be minimized. Troponin Ic is a reliable marker to determine the level of this myocardial stress. Studies have shown that post-conditioning with AVH has a protective effect on the myocardium, if the treatment is initiated at the start of the ischemia. The aim of this study is to evaluate the protective effect on the myocardium (by measuring troponin levels) of the association of pre-conditioning and post-conditioning with Sevoflurane (AVH) sedation administered during and after scheduled surgery for valve replacement, via sternotomy or thoracotomy compared with total intravenous anaesthesia with Propofol.
The left atrium appendage (LAA) is a remnant of the original embryonic left atrium formed during the third week of gestation. LAA is believed to function as a decompression chamber during left ventricular systole and other periods when left atrial pressure is elevated. The LAA is also a major endocrine organ and is the main producer of ANP (atrial natriuretic peptide) in the human heart. The ANP concentration is 40 times higher in the LAA walls than in the rest of the atrial wall. A study of patients having undergone the maze procedure and associated LAA removal found a significantly lower ANP secretion and an increase in salt and water retention. Whether this could eventually lead to hypertension or heart failure symptoms is not known. Removal of the LAA is routinely performed during antiarrhythmic surgical techniques ("MAZE surgery") to reduce the risk of subsequent LAA thrombus. Furthermore, new percutaneous ablation techniques target LAA to reduce further risks of atrial fibrilation recurrences. However, in addition to effects on diastolic atrial function and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) secretion, this could potentially reduce stroke volume and cardiac output and may thus promote heart failure. Its removal could be particularly detrimental in patients with existing heart failure and high intraatrial pressure, as it would further promote pulmonary congestion and also reduce their cardiac output. The study will be conducted at the CHU Brugmann Hospital, with collaboration between cardiac surgery and cardiology wards. Subjects referred for non valvular cardiac surgery will be prospectively included during the first 6 months following the onset of the protocol. Echocardiographic and invasive data will be collected simultaneously. The goals of the study are: - To evaluate the immediate impact of temporary closure of the LAA using a vascular clamp in the beating heart of human subjects during cardiac surgery. Impact of LAA occlusion will be measured using transesophageal echocardiography and hemodynamic measurement of the cardiac output. - To correlate echocardiographic parameters with in situ hemodynamic data. A significant role of the LAA in the cardiac hemodynamic including the left ventricle outflow might have different clinical implications and will raise questions about: - Appropriateness of LAA resection in antiarrhythmic surgery - Importance of restoring sinus rhythm in atrial fibrilation patients - Importance to spare LAA from ablation during atrial fibrilation ablation to avoid significant consequences on cardiac function. - Appropriateness of the LAA occluding device in atrial fibrillation patients.