View clinical trials related to Heart Surgery.
Filter by:Rationale: Evidence regarding the timing of chest tube removal after cardiac surgery is sparse. The timing of chest tubes removal constitutes a balancing act between risk of retained blood syndrome, infection, patient discomfort and opioid-related side effects. Several studies have shown that chest tubes can safely be removed on the first postoperative day compared to later. A single retrospective study raised concern as chest tube removal on the day of surgery was associated with an increased requirement of drainage of pleural effusions. Primary Objective: To compare the impact of two standard chest tube removal protocols following open-heart surgery on the incidence of pleural and/or pericardial effusion requiring invasive drainage Secondary Objectives To evaluate the impact of chest tube removal on the day of surgery (DAY0) compared to the first postoperative day (DAY1) regarding: - Comsumption of analgetic drugs - Early postoperative pain - Incidence of infection - Early postoperative respiratory function Study design: Single-center, open, parallel-group, prospective, cluster-randomized controlled trial Alternate assignment of chest tube removal according to Day 0 versus Day 1 protocol based upon the month of surgery (even versus odd months). Study population: 1300 consecutive patients undergoing elective open heart surgery in full or lower hemisternotomy with or without cardiopulmonary bypass including coronary artery bypass grafting, valve surgery, simple aortic surgery or combinations.