Westaby S, Pillai R, Parry A, O'Regan D, Giannopoulos N, Grebenik K, Sinclair M, Fisher A
Oxford Heart Centre, John Radcliffe Hospital, Headington, UK.
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 1993;7(6):313-8; discussion 318. doi: 10.1016/1010-7940(93)90173-9.
We considered that, with modern perfusion equipment and mildly hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass, protracted post-operative ventilation in an intensive care unit (ITU) is no longer required after most cardiac operations. We used a three-bedded cardiac recovery area (CRA) within the operating suite for 1,000 patients between January 1990 and June 1991. Forty-five patients with special needs were managed in the ITU. The time to extubation (T50%; range) for coronary bypass, aortic valve, mitral valve, and double-valve patients was 2.0 (0-42), 2.5 (0-12), 3.0 (0-15), and 3.0 (1-36) hours, respectively. Recovery beds were re-used allowing 5-6 operations daily. The difference in nursing staff complement for a CRA versus ITU bed was 4.5/7.8. Patient management was by nurse specialists supported by cardiac surgeons. Intervention by cardiac anaesthetists or intensivists was limited to specific ventilatory problems or renal failure. The early extubation policy failed in ten patients (five coronary, three aortic, one mitral and one double-valve patient) through poor pre-operative respiratory function, left ventricular failure or intra-operative events. The overall mortality in CRA was 1.4%. The mean duration of post-operative stay was 7 days (range 5-12). We conclude that a CRA staffed by nurse practitioners provides a safe and effective alternative to the anaesthetist-managed ITU. A rapid turnover of CRA beds removes the constraints of ITU bed availability.