The Usefulness of Microcirculatory Assessment After Cardiac Surgery: Illustrative Case Report.
Marcos FernandesAndrea De LorenzoEduardo TibiriçáPublished in: Brazilian journal of cardiovascular surgery (2024)
Cardiac surgery causes a series of disturbances in human physiology. The correction of systemic hemodynamic variables is frequently ineffective in improving microcirculatory perfusion and delivering oxygen to the tissues. We present the case of a 52-year-old male submitted to mitral valve replacement (metallic valve) and subaortic membrane resection. Sublingual microcirculatory density and perfusion were evaluated using a handheld CytoCam camera before surgery and in the early postoperative period. In this case, systemic hemodynamic variables were compromised despite an actual improvement in the microcirculatory parameters in comparison to the preoperative evaluation, possibly due to the correction of the structural cardiac defects.
Keyphrases
- mitral valve
- cardiac surgery
- case report
- patients undergoing
- left ventricular
- endothelial cells
- minimally invasive
- left atrial
- acute kidney injury
- gene expression
- coronary artery bypass
- aortic valve
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- heart failure
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- pluripotent stem cells
- allergic rhinitis
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement