1. Monitoring of intraoperative femoral oxygenation predicts acute kidney injury after pediatric cardiac surgery
- Author
-
Takamichi Inoue, Satoshi Kohira, Tomoyo Ebine, Fumiaki Shikata, Kiyotaka Fujii, and Kagami Miyaji
- Subjects
Biomaterials ,Cardiopulmonary Bypass ,Postoperative Complications ,Risk Factors ,Biomedical Engineering ,Humans ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Bioengineering ,General Medicine ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Cardiac Surgical Procedures ,Child - Abstract
Cardiopulmonary bypass-associated acute kidney injury (CPB-AKI) is a pediatric cardiac surgery postoperative complication that is associated with a longer duration of mechanical ventilation and length of hospital stay. Identifying an early predictor of CPB-AKI is critical. Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), which can provide real-time monitoring of regional tissue oxygen saturation (rSO2) during CPB, may predict CPB-AKI in an early phase of surgical treatment. This study analyzed clinical data from 87 children who underwent an elective surgical repair of ventricular septal defect (VSD) from January 2013 to March 2019. NIRS sensors were placed on the patients’ forehead, abdomen, and thighs. The pediatric modified risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage (p-RIFLE) score was determined for each patient postoperatively. The incidence of AKI based on the p-RIFLE classification was 11.5% at the end of surgery, 23.0% at 24 h after surgery, and 5.7% at 48 h after surgery. The AKI incidence rate was highest at 24 h after surgery. Multiple regression analysis revealed that femoral oxygenation (rSO2) during CPB, CPB time, oxygen delivery index (DO2i), and lactate at the end of CPB were independent risk factors for AKI. Receiver-operating characteristic curve analysis indicated that femoral oxygenation of 74% or less predicted AKI development within 24 h after surgery. In conclusion, rSO2measured at the thigh during CPB is highly predictive of CPB-AKI.
- Published
- 2022