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. 2024 Aug;38(8):1673-1682.
doi: 10.1053/j.jvca.2024.04.025. Epub 2024 Apr 22.

Continuous Right Ventricular Pressure Monitoring in Cardiac Surgery

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Continuous Right Ventricular Pressure Monitoring in Cardiac Surgery

André Denault et al. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 2024 Aug.

Abstract

Objective: Right ventricular (RV) dysfunction in cardiac surgery can lead to RV failure, which is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Abnormal RV function can be identified using RV pressure monitoring. The primary objective of the study is to determine the proportion of patients with abnormal RV early to end-diastole diastolic pressure gradient (RVDPG) and abnormal RV end-diastolic pressure (RVEDP) before initiation and after cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) separation. The secondary objective is to evaluate if RVDPG before CPB initiation is associated with difficult and complex separation from CPB, RV dysfunction, and failure at the end of cardiac surgery.

Design: Prospective study.

Setting: Tertiary care cardiac institute.

Participants: Cardiac surgical patients.

Intervention: Cardiac surgery.

Measurements and main results: Automated electronic quantification of RVDPG and RVEDP were obtained. Hemodynamic measurements were correlated with cardiac and extracardiac parameters from transesophageal echocardiography and postoperative complications. Abnormal RVDPG was present in 80% of the patients (n = 105) at baseline, with a mean RVEDP of 14.2 ± 3.9 mmHg. Patients experienced an RVDPG > 4 mmHg for a median duration of 50.2% of the intraoperative period before CPB initiation and 60.6% after CPB separation. A total of 46 (43.8%) patients had difficult/complex separation from CPB, 18 (38.3%) patients had RV dysfunction, and 8 (17%) had RV failure. Abnormal RVDPG before CPB was not associated with postoperative outcome.

Conclusion: Elevated RVDPG and RVEDP are common in cardiac surgery. RVDPG and RVEDP before CPB initiation are not associated with RV dysfunction and failure but can be used to diagnose them.

Keywords: cardiac anesthesiology; cardiac surgery; hemodynamic; hemodynamic monitoring; right ventricle; right ventricular pressure monitoring.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest Dr. Denault received a research grant from Edwards Lifesciences. He is a consultant for CAE Healthcare and on the speakers bureau for Masimo. Daniel Scherb, Kevin Moses, and Cristhian Potes are engineers from Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, CA.

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