Goal-directed therapy in cardiovascular surgery: A case series study.
Nader GivtajElnaz HosseinzadehFatemeh Shima HadipourzadehZahra FaritousMohammad Hasan AskariMaryam Ghanbari GarekaniPublished in: Journal of cardiovascular and thoracic research (2023)
Hemodynamic and intravascular volume monitoring has been utilized and significantly improved thanks to the technology revolution. Goal-Directed Therapy (GDT) derived from this advanced monitoring is beneficial for complex surgeries, and it shifted the medical approaches from static therapy to more personalized functional treatments. Conventional monitoring methods such as blood pressure, heart rate, urinary output, and central venous pressure are commonly used. However, studies have shown these routine parameters often cannot precisely estimate the quality of tissue perfusion. Tissue hypoperfusion and hypoxia play a crucial role in initiating a systemic inflammatory response after prolonged surgeries, resulting in unstable hemodynamic condition of the patients. Several studies reported the importance of GDT in non-cardiac surgeries and there are few reports on cardiac surgeries. However, tissue perfusion and fluid management are more critical in complex and prolonged cardiovascular surgeries to avoid complications such as low cardiac output syndrome and renal or pulmonary dysfunction. Different advanced hemodynamic monitorings have been utilized perioperatively in cardiac surgery to help decision-making on inotrope and fluid management. In this article we present 5 cases of usefulness hemodynamic monitoring in patients who underwent cardiovascular surgeries.
Keyphrases
- heart rate
- blood pressure
- inflammatory response
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- cardiac surgery
- decision making
- minimally invasive
- heart rate variability
- heart failure
- coronary artery
- endothelial cells
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- bone marrow
- computed tomography
- mesenchymal stem cells
- patient reported outcomes
- quality improvement
- coronary artery disease
- cognitive impairment
- blood glucose
- patient reported
- coronary artery bypass
- contrast enhanced
- drug induced