D'Ancona Giuseppe, Baillot Richard, Poirier Brigitte, Dagenais Francois, de Ibarra José Ignacio Saez, Bauset Richard, Mathieu Patrick, Doyle Daniel
Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Laval Hospital, Quebec Heart Institute, Sainte-Foy, Quebec, Canada G1V 4G5.
Tex Heart Inst J. 2003;30(4):280-5.
We designed this study to define determinants of gastrointestinal complications after cardiac surgery. From January 1992 through December 2000, 11,058 patients underwent cardiac surgery on cardiopulmonary bypass at our institution. Data were prospectively collected and univariate and multivariate analyses conducted. A total of 147 gastrointestinal complications occurred in 129 patients (129/11,058; 1.2%) including gastroesophagitis (18, 12.2%), upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage (42, 28.6%), perforated peptic ulcer (7, 4.7%), cholecystitis (10, 6.8%), pancreatitis (13, 8.8%), intestinal ischemia (17, 11.5%), colitis (18, 12.2%), diverticulitis (5, 3.4%), intestinal occlusion (2, 1.1%), lower gastrointestinal hemorrhage (1, 0.7%), and mixed gastrointestinal complications (14, 9.5%). Patients with gastrointestinal complications were significantly older and had significantly higher comorbidity (unstable angina, chronic renal failure, and peripheral vascular disease), morbidity (prolonged mechanical ventilation, intraaortic balloon pumping, bleeding, acute renal failure, stroke, and infection), and mortality rates (22.5% vs 4%, P < 0.0001). They also had longer cardiopulmonary bypass times and higher valvular surgery rates. Multivariate analysis identified 6 independent predictors for gastrointestinal complications: prolonged mechanical ventilation (odds ratio [OR], 5.5), postoperative renal failure (OR, 4.2), sepsis (OR, 3.6), valve surgery (OR, 3.2), preoperative chronic renal failure (OR, 2.7), and sternal infection (OR, 2.4). Factors such as mechanical ventilation, renal failure, and sepsis are the stronger predictors for GI complications, causing splanchnic hypoperfusion, hypomotility, and hypoxia. Furthermore, excessive anticoagulation after valve replacement may lead to GI hemorrhage. Valve surgery, often requiring anticoagulation, increases bleeding. Monitoring mechanical ventilation and hemodynamic parameters, adopting early extubation and mobilization measures, preventing infections, and strictly monitoring renal function and anticoagulation may prevent catastrophic abdominal complications.
我们开展这项研究以确定心脏手术后胃肠道并发症的决定因素。1992年1月至2000年12月,我院11058例患者在体外循环下接受了心脏手术。前瞻性收集数据并进行单因素和多因素分析。129例患者(129/11058;1.2%)共发生147例胃肠道并发症,包括食管炎(18例,12.2%)、上消化道出血(42例,28.6%)、消化性溃疡穿孔(7例,4.7%)、胆囊炎(10例,6.8%)、胰腺炎(13例,8.8%)、肠缺血(17例,11.5%)、结肠炎(18例,12.2%)、憩室炎(5例,3.4%)、肠梗阻(2例,1.1%)、下消化道出血(1例,0.7%)以及混合性胃肠道并发症(14例,9.5%)。发生胃肠道并发症的患者年龄显著更大,合并症(不稳定型心绞痛、慢性肾衰竭和外周血管疾病)、发病率(机械通气时间延长、主动脉内球囊反搏、出血、急性肾衰竭、中风和感染)及死亡率(22.5%对4%,P<0.0001)也显著更高。他们的体外循环时间也更长,瓣膜手术率更高。多因素分析确定了胃肠道并发症的6个独立预测因素:机械通气时间延长(比值比[OR],5.5)、术后肾衰竭(OR,4.2)、脓毒症(OR,3.6)、瓣膜手术(OR,3.2)、术前慢性肾衰竭(OR,2.7)和胸骨感染(OR,2.4)。机械通气、肾衰竭和脓毒症等因素是胃肠道并发症更强的预测因素,会导致内脏低灌注、运动减弱和缺氧。此外,瓣膜置换术后过度抗凝可能导致胃肠道出血。瓣膜手术常需抗凝,会增加出血风险。监测机械通气和血流动力学参数,采取早期拔管和活动措施,预防感染,严格监测肾功能和抗凝情况,可能预防严重的腹部并发症。