AI Article Synopsis

  • Conventional ultrafiltration (CUF) during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) can reduce hemodilution but may lead to tissue hypoperfusion and elevated lactate levels.
  • A study of 641 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) found that higher weight-indexed CUF volumes significantly correlated with increased incidence of hyperlactatemia (HL) post-surgery.
  • Specifically, HL was associated with nearly double the CUF volume in affected patients, highlighting the importance of monitoring CUF volumes to prevent elevated lactate levels in post-operative care.

Article Abstract

Background: Conventional ultrafiltration (CUF) during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is utilized to minimize hemodilution. However, removing high volumes leads to tissue hypoperfusion by activating the anaerobic glycolysis pathways. This study aimed to determine the association between weight-indexed CUF volumes and lactate in patients who underwent coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).

Methods: In this single-center retrospective study, 641 CABG patients, who were referred to Al-Zahra Hospital (Shiraz, Iran) and underwent CPB, during 2019-2021, were recruited. Peri-operative parameters were extracted from the patient's records. The patients with non-elective status, pre-existing liver and renal diseases, ejection fraction<35%, and repeated sternotomy were excluded from the study. An increase in post-operative lactate level≥4 mmol/L after 6 hours was defined as hyperlactatemia (HL). To predict HL, univariable and multiple logistic regression modeling, while controlling confounding factors, were employed.

Results: The patients' mean age was 58.8±11.1 years, and 39.2% were women. The incidence of HL was 14.5% (93 patients). There was a significant association between weight-indexed CUF volume and HL. The volume removed in the HL patients was almost doubled (43.37±11.32 21.41±8.15 mL/Kg, P<0.001), and the higher the weight-indexed CUF volume, the more likely to develop an HL at a rate of 1.38 (Odds ratio=1.38 [1.27-1.49], 95% CI, P<0.001). Furthermore, the multiple logistic regression model showed that HL was associated with the lowest mean arterial pressure (MAP) during CPB.

Conclusion: A higher volume of ultrafiltration was associated with increased post-operative serum lactate levels.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11452587PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.30476/ijms.2023.99730.3186DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Conventional ultrafiltration (CUF) during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) can reduce hemodilution but may lead to tissue hypoperfusion and elevated lactate levels.
  • A study of 641 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) found that higher weight-indexed CUF volumes significantly correlated with increased incidence of hyperlactatemia (HL) post-surgery.
  • Specifically, HL was associated with nearly double the CUF volume in affected patients, highlighting the importance of monitoring CUF volumes to prevent elevated lactate levels in post-operative care.
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Percent predicted peak oxygen uptake is superior to weight-indexed peak oxygen uptake in risk stratification before lung cancer lobectomy.

J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg

November 2024

Department of Clinical Physiology, and Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.

Objective: To improve preoperative risk stratification in lung cancer lobectomy by identifying and comparing optimal thresholds for peak oxygen uptake (VO) presented as weight-indexed and percent of predicted values, respectively.

Methods: This was a longitudinal cohort study including national registry data on patients scheduled for cancer lobectomy that used available data from preoperative cardiopulmonary exercise testing. The measured VO was indexed by body mass (mL/kg/min) and also compared with 2 established reference equations (Wasserman-Hansen and Study of Health in Pomerania, respectively).

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Background: We hypothesized that the association of ultrafiltration rate with mortality in hemodialysis patients was differentially affected by weight and sex and sought to derive a sex- and weight-indexed ultrafiltration rate measure that captures the differential effects of these parameters on the association of ultrafiltration rate with mortality.

Methods: Data were analyzed from the US Fresenius Kidney Care (FKC) database for 1 year after patient entry into a FKC dialysis unit (baseline) and over 2 years of follow-up for patients receiving thrice-weekly in-center hemodialysis. To investigate the joint effect of baseline-year ultrafiltration rate and postdialysis weight on survival, we fit Cox proportional hazards models using bivariate tensor product spline functions and constructed contour plots of weight-specific mortality hazard ratios over the entire range of ultrafiltration rate values and postdialysis weights (W).

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Background: Following COVID-19, patients often present with ongoing symptoms comparable to chronic fatigue and subjective deterioration of exercise capacity (EC), which has been recently described as postacute COVID-19 syndrome.

Objective: To objectify the reduced EC after COVID-19 and to evaluate for pathologic limitations.

Methods: Thirty patients with subjective limitation of EC performed cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET).

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Objective: Conventional ultrafiltration (CUF) during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) serves to hemoconcentrate blood volume to avoid allogeneic blood transfusions. Previous studies have determined CUF volumes as a continuous variable are associated with postoperative acute kidney injury (AKI) after cardiac surgery, but optimal weight-indexed volumes that predict AKI have not been described.

Design: Retrospective cohort.

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