Perioperative tachyarrhythmias are common in children undergoing cardiac surgery, contributing to significant mortality and morbidity. Landiolol, an ultrashort-acting beta-blocker, offers selective heart rate (HR) control in pediatric patients with tachycardia during cardiac surgery. The LANDI-cardioPed study assessed landiolol's safety and efficacy in children during cardiac surgery. The retrospective review included patients under 1 year of age with intraoperative tachycardia during cardiac surgery treated with landiolol hydrochloride (Rapibloc®) at the Pediatric Heart Center Giessen, Germany (June 2017-October 2022). The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients achieving a target HR (< 160 bpm) by surgery end. Among 24 patients (46% neonates, 54% infants; mean weight: 4.8 kg; preexisting heart failure in 71%), 83% achieved the target HR by surgery's end, with all patients reaching it during treatment. Median HR normalization time was 4.0 min and 75% of children reached it within 18.5 min. Landiolol demonstrated good hemodynamic stability. It reduced HR by 6% from baseline while maintaining stable blood pressure and HR/BP ratios, with no increased vasopressor use. The drug was titrated individually, with a mean initial dose of 23 µg/kg/min, the dose was 26 µg/kg/min upon reaching target HR, and the maximum dose of 49 µg/kg/min. The treatment duration averaged 10.5 h. Safety was favorable; three adverse events unrelated to landiolol were reported, and no dose interruptions occurred. Landiolol was effective and safe for HR control in neonates and infants with tachycardia during cardiac surgery, which aligns with current knowledge on its use in children.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00246-025-03824-6 | DOI Listing |
Clin Transplant
March 2025
Division of Cardiac Surgery, CardioVascular Center, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Background: This study aims to analyze the patient characteristics, clinical outcomes, and contemporary trends concerning type A aortic dissection (TAAD) in previous recipients of abdominal solid organ transplantation (ASOT) in the United States.
Methods: The National Inpatient Sample was queried to identify all patients aged ≥18 with TAAD and a history of ASOT (TAAD-ASOT) between 2002 and 2015Q3 using ICD-9 diagnosis and procedure codes. Baseline characteristics and in-hospital outcomes were compared between TAAD-ASOT patients and TAAD patients without a history of ASOT (TAAD-non-ASOT).
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg
March 2025
Division of Thoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, ; Taipei City, Taiwan.
Objectives: To assess the prognostic impact of adequate lymphadenectomy and determine the optimal nodal assessment for different clinical stages of lung cancer.
Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 1214 patients with clinical stage I-III non-small cell lung cancer who had preoperative PET/CT and curative surgery (2006-2017). Patients were categorized based on whether they had adequate [R0] or inadequate lymphadenectomy [R(un)].
Interdiscip Cardiovasc Thorac Surg
March 2025
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, China.
Objectives: This study aimed to explore the possibility of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET-CT) in identifying histological classification of thymic tumors.
Methods: Patients diagnosed as thymic tumors and accepted PET-CT scans were included. Thymic tumors were classified into three subgroups: low risk thymoma (A, AB and B1), high risk thymoma (B2, B3) and thymic carcinoma (TC).
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg
March 2025
Department of Pediatrics, University of Toyama, Graduate School of Medicine, Toyama, Japan.
Objectives: Although there has been rapid development in the field of three-dimensional morphological analyses of congenital heart disease, with the three-dimensional volume-rendered images providing visualization of the external vascular anatomy, the precise reproduction of "Swiss-cheese" ventricular septum is not well established. We created three-dimensional printed models and computer graphics based on multi-slice computed tomography of patients with complex multiple ventricular septal defects for surgical decision planning of this difficult cardiac defect.
Methods: Seven patients with complex multiple ventricular septal defects were evaluated preoperatively using three-dimensional printed models and computer graphics to plan therapeutic interventions.
Interdiscip Cardiovasc Thorac Surg
March 2025
Division of Cardiac Surgery, Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University of Foggia, Foggia, Italy.
Objectives: Differences in inflammatory responses between men and women may contribute to sex disparities in cardiac surgery outcomes. We investigated how sex differences influence systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and adverse outcomes after cardiac surgery.
Methods: A single-center retrospective cohort study of patients undergoing cardiac surgery from 2018 to 2020 was performed.
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