Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Prognostic Relevance of N-terminal Pro B-type Natriuretic Peptide(NTproBNP), Cerebral Oxygen Saturation (ScO2), and Preoperative Creatinine Clearance in Cardiac Surgery Patients - Amendment 2: the Role of NTproBNP and ScO2 in Predicting Mortality and Postoperative Organ Dysfunction.
Cerebral oxygen saturation (ScO2) is a measure of cerebral and systemic oxygen delivery to
demand ratio. An observational trial in a heterogeneous cohort of 1078 patients patients
revealed that a ScO2 below 50% absolute during oxygen insufflation is an independent
predictor of short and long term mortality in patients undergoing on-pump cardiac surgery.
Comparably, a low ScO2 was a predictor of postoperative morbidity determined as a combined
endpoint of a high dependency unit stay of more than 9 days and/or at least 2 of the major
postoperative complications. low cardiac output syndrome, stroke, need of renal replacement
therapy or reintubation.
The primary objectives of the present prospective observational study is to determine, if
there is an association between preoperative ScO2 and postoperative organ dysfunction
determined by sensitive markers of organ dysfunction (N-Terminal pro B-type natriuretic
peptide, high sensitive troponin T, growth-differentiation factor 15, soluble -FLT1, and
placental growth factor)
n/a
Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
| Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed |
NCT02088320 -
Measurement of Pulmonary Transit Time by Echocardiography: Comparison With Cardiac MRI
|
||
| Completed |
NCT03864016 -
Ability of Pupillometry to Reduce Sufentanil Consumption in Planned Cardiac Surgery: Randomized, Controlled, Single-center Clinical Superiority Trial
|
N/A |