Blood Lactate Level as Predictor of Early Outcome after Cardiac Surgery under Cardiopulmonary Bypass

Authors

  • Md Abul Kalam Azad Department of Cardiac Surgery, National Institute of Cardiovascular Disease (NICVD), Sher-e-bangla Nagar, Dhaka
  • Md Abul Quashem Department of Cardiac Surgery, National Institute of Cardiovascular Disease (NICVD), Sher-e-bangla Nagar, Dhaka
  • Md Rezaul Karim Department of Cardiac Surgery, National Institute of Cardiovascular Disease (NICVD), Sher-e-bangla Nagar, Dhaka
  • Md Kamrul Hasan Department of Cardiac Surgery, National Institute of Cardiovascular Disease (NICVD), Sher-e-bangla Nagar, Dhaka

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3329/uhj.v13i2.37659

Keywords:

Blood Lactate Level, Cardio-Pulmonary ByPass

Abstract

We examined the hypothesis that high blood lactate level in ICU patient after adult cardiac surgery under cardiopulmonary bypass is associated with early adverse outcome. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether blood lactate level after cardiac surgery is predictor of the early outcome after adult cardiac surgery under CPB. In this prospective observational study total 100 patients were enrolled who underwent elective cardiac surgery under CPB as per inclusion and exclusion criteria. Blood lactate levels > 3mmol/ L 6 hours after ICU transfer were present in 57(57%) patients. The binary logistic regression analysis showed that blood lactate level 6 hours after ICU transfer is an independent predictor for prolonged mechanical ventilation time (OR 2.417, 95% CI 1.272 - 4.596, p = .007), prolonged ICU stay (OR 1.562, 95% CI 1.181 - 2.067, p = .002), neurological deficit (OR 2.432, 95% CI 1.539 - 3.843, p = .001), pulmonary complication (OR 1.301, 95% CI 1.011 - 1.676, p = .041), arrhythmia (OR 1.444, 95% CI 1.102 - 1.893, p = .008), renal dysfunction (OR 1.838, 95% CI 1.352 - 2.497, p = .001) and mortality (OR 1.822, 95% CI 1.123- 2.955, p = .015). In conclusion, blood lactate level 6 hours after ICU transfer is an independent risk factor for worse outcomes in adult patients including mortality after cardiac surgery under CPB.

University Heart Journal Vol. 13, No. 2, July 2017; 50-54

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Published

2018-07-26

How to Cite

Azad, M. A. K., Quashem, M. A., Karim, M. R., & Hasan, M. K. (2018). Blood Lactate Level as Predictor of Early Outcome after Cardiac Surgery under Cardiopulmonary Bypass. University Heart Journal, 13(2), 50–54. https://doi.org/10.3329/uhj.v13i2.37659

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Section

Original Articles