AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the incidence of distal limb ischemia caused by femoral artery cannulation during Minimally Invasive Cardiac Surgery (MICS), with findings showing varying rates of ischemia based on different criteria.
  • The research was a prospective cohort study involving 280 patients, revealing that younger age is a significant predictor of ischemia, while long-term complications were minimal and unrelated to intraoperative ischemia.
  • The authors suggest that intraoperative monitoring using Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) offers limited value, prompting a recommendation for future research to focus on other outcomes like acute kidney injury.

Article Abstract

Literature regarding monitoring and consequences of distal limb ischemia due to femoral artery cannulation for Minimally Invasive Cardiac Surgery (MICS) remains limited. The primary objective was to determine its incidence, defined as a ≥ 15% difference in regional Oxygen Saturation (rSO) lasting ≥ four consecutive minutes between the cannulated and non-cannulated limb. The secondary objectives included: determination of distal limb ischemia, defined as a Tissue Oxygenation Index (TOI) < 50% in the cannulated limb, identification of predictors for distal limb ischemia, determination of a possible association of NIRS-diagnosed ischemia with acute kidney injury, and the need for vascular surgery up to six months after cardiac surgery. A prospective, observational cohort study with blinded rSO-measurements to prevent intraoperative clinical decision-making. A single-center, community-hospital, clinical study. All consecutive patients ≥ 18 years old, and scheduled for predefined MICS. Patients underwent MICS with bilateral calf muscle rSO-measurements conducted by Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS). In total 75/280 patients (26.79%) experienced distal limb ischemia according to the primary objective, while 18/280 patients (6.42%) experienced distal limb ischemia according to the secondary objective. Multivariate logistic regression showed younger age to be an independent predictor for distal limb ischemia (p = 0.003). None of the patients who suffered intraoperative ischemia required vascular surgery within the follow-up period. The incidence of NIRS-diagnosed ischemia varied from 6.4% to 26.8% depending on the used criteria. Short and long-term vascular sequelae, however, are limited and not intraoperative ischemia related. The added value of intraoperative distal limb NIRS monitoring for vascular reasons seems limited. Future research on femoral artery cannulation in MICS should shift focus to other outcome parameters such as acute kidney injury, postoperative pain or paresthesias.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10209224PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00380-023-02241-0DOI Listing

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