Title: Cardiac Complications
1Cardiac Complications
- Lynn McGugan Clark
- ACNP
- Duke University
- mcgug001_at_mc.duke.edu
2Tamponade
- Heart too large for pericardial space
- Apparent immediately after chest closure
- r/t edema
- Fluid accumulation
- Pericardium or anterior mediastinum
- Un-drained blood and clots
- Correcting coagulopathy -gt pericardial clot
- Chest tubes unable to drain
3Tamponade
- Delayed
- Occurs up to several weeks after operation
- May occur after pacing wire or LA catheter
removal - More common in anticoagulated patients
- Possibly from postpericardiotomy syndrome
- May be caused by chylopericardium
- Not prevented by prolonged drainage of
pericardial space
4Pathophysiology
- Stage 1 Accumulation of fluid causes increased
ventricular stiffness - gt need higher filling
pressures - Stage 2 Pericardial pressure rises above
ventricular filling pressure - CO decreases
- Stage 3 Further decrease in CO occurs r/t
equalization of pericardial and ventricular
filling pressures - Transmural distending pressures are insufficient
to overcome pericardial pressures - Septal shift
- Reduced diastolic filling
5Widened Mediastinum
6Signs and Symptoms
- Widened mediastinal silhouette
- Rapid increase in right and left atrial pressures
- Narrow pulse pressure
- Increased diastolic pressure an attempt to
compensate for decreased CO by sending blood back
to the heart - Decreased CO
- Associated conditions (low UOP, low Sv02,
acidosis) - Tachycardia
7Signs and Symptoms
- Prominent x descent on CVP waveform
- Pulsus paradoxus
- Drop in BP on inspiration by at least 10 mmHg
- Becks triad
- Hypotension (r/t decreased CO)
- Muffled heart sounds (r/t insulating fluid)
- JVD (r/t lack of forward blood flow
accumulation in venous system)
8Pulsus Paradoxus
http//www.rhc.ac.ir/PTC/PDFs/PTCC73.pdf
9CVP in Tamponade
http//www.rhc.ac.ir/PTC/PDFs/PTCC73.pdf
10Diagnostic Tests
- Echocardiogram
- Hamid et al (2006) found only 20 of patients
with tamponade met radiographic criteria for
tamponade, while 100 of patients showed
pericardial effusions on echo - Unclotted blood appears as black space around
heart, LV appears small and underfilled, vena
cava appear distended, RA collapse in diastole - CXR
- CT
11Regional Tamponade
- Clot anterior to R atrium/ventricle
- High CVP, low wedge
- Clot behind L atrium
- PAWP high, CVP low
12Management
- Maintain perfusion
- give fluid and inotropes
- Reduce positive pressure ventilation
- Milk/strip CT
- Monitor for PEA
- Return to OR/emergent opening of the chest
13Emergent Opening of the Chest
14Indications
- Bleeding
- Cardiac Arrest
- Clinical Suspicion of Tamponade
- Hemodynamic Instability
- Peri-op MI
- Arrhythmias
- Graft malfunction
15Post-Op Cardiac Surgery Arrest Statistics
- Incidence post cardiac surgery 1-5
- Survival of arrests occurring in ICU 33-79
- Most common causes VF, tamponade
- Chest reopening within 10 minutes improves
survival
?
16VF Post Cardiac Surgery
- Best Evidence Topic
- 15 papers reviewed
- Chance of successful defibrillation
- 1st attempt 75-78
- 2nd attempt 35
- 3rd attempt 14
- Conclusions Three shocks should be quickly
delivered. If these do not succeed the chance of
a 4th shock succeeding is likely to be lt10 and
immediate chest reopening should be performed. -
- Richardson, L., Dissanayake, A. Dunning, J.
(2007). What cardioversion protocol for
ventricular fibrillation should be followed for
patients who arrest shortly post-cardiac surgery?
Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery,
6(6), pp 799-805. Retrieved January 7, 2008 from
http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17693437?ordin
alpos1itoolEntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_
ResultsPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum
17Etiology and Precipitating Causes
- VF/VT
- Myocardial injury/infarction
- Reperfusion injury
- R-on-T with asynchronous pacing
- Acquired (hypokalemia/drug toxicity/long QT
syndrome) - Cardioversion with unsynchronized shocks
18Etiology and Precipitating Causes
- PEA
- Hypovolemia
- Tamponade
- Massive MI
- Tension PTX
- Lung hyperinflation
- Drug toxicity
- Anaphylaxis
19Exacerbating Factors
- Hypoxemia
- Hypercarbia
- Acidosis
- Hypokalemia
- Hypomagnesemia
- Hypothermia
20Etiology and Precipitating Causes
- Asystole/Heart Block/Bradycardia
- Injured/edematous conduction system
- Hyperkalemia
- Acidosis
- Drug toxicity
- After prolonged VF
- Pacing problem (wires/connections/box)
- Discontinuation of overdrive pacing
21Which Patients Benefit from Opening the Chest?
- 6 year prospective study
- Results 25 survival to discharge
- Favorable determinants of outcome were
- Arrest within 24 h of surgery
- Reopening within 10 minutes of arrest
- Arrest in intensive care unit (ICU)
- All patients who were reopened outside the ICU
died - Mackay, J. H., Powell, S. J., Osgathorp, J.
Rozario, C. J. (2002). Six year prospective
audit of chest reopening after cardiac arrest.
European Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery,
22(3), pp. 421-425.
22Patient Risk Factors
- Older
- Procedure other than CABG
- Urgent/emergent initial operation
- Reoperation
- Chronic renal insufficiency
- Longer CPB and aortic cross clamp time
- ?Pre-op ASA and prolonged bleeding times
- Pre-op myocardial infarction
23Initial Evaluation
- Validate check for pulse, evaluate waveforms
- Ensure ETT patency and position
- Exclude ventilator as cause
- Manual bagging
- Paralyze if suspect ventilator dysynchrony
- Consider 30 second disconnect to exclude
hyperinflation
Adapted from Sidebotham Gillham, 2007
24Initial Evaluation
- Exclude tension PTX
- Auscultate chest
- Palpate trachea
- Consider re-opening early if tamponade suspected
- Stop sedatives and hypotensive agents
- Ensure vasoactive gtts are being delivered
25Additional Evaluation
- What is the MAP?
- lt 30 mmHg gt initiate cardiac arrest algorithm,
reopen chest
Adapted from Sidebotham Gillham, 2007
26Additional Evaluation
- 30-50 mmHg
- evaluate treat for arrhythmias
- Fluid challenge
- Phenylephrine bolus 50-100 mcg or Epinephrine
bolus 100-200 mcg - Consider reopening chest if unresponsive to above
- If responsive, start/increase epi/vasopressin and
evaluate cause with ECG, ABG, labs, CXR, CO, TEE,
consider IABP
27Additional Evaluation
- gt 50 mmHg gt
- Zero transducers, ensure gtts delivered,
auscultate heart and lungs, examine CT - Inform surgeon
- Consider paralysis and sedation, manually bag
patient - Pace at 90 bpm, fluid challenge, increase/start
inotropes - PA catheter placement/TEE
28Preparation
- Decision made by surgeon/senior resident
- Sterile attire and field
- Drapes
- Caps, gowns, masks
- Prepped with betadine
- Hallway partitioned off
- OR nurse if available
- Light source
- Set up and get blood products to bedside
- Sterile suction tubing and catheters
29Procedure
- Incision made beside staples/suture line
- Wires cut and removed
- Soft tissues and sternal edges inspected
- Clots evacuated
- Inspect all operative sites
30Procedure
- Sutures, clips, thrombostatic material applied to
bleeding sites - Drainage tubes cleared of blood and clots, pacing
wires re-attached - Internal cardiac massage if needed
- Chest closed or packed and left open
31Outcomes
- Median amount of blood removed 1L
- Chest bleeding found in gt 90
- Focal bleeding gt 55
- Diffuse ooze approximately 33
- Initiation of mechanical assistance possible
- 48 of patients with cardiac arrest responded to
open chest CPR (Anthi et al., 1998) and survived
to discharge
32Complications
- Sternal Wound Infection
- Increased Mortality
- Renal Failure
- Respiratory Failure
- ARDS
- Sepsis
- Atrial Arrhythmias
33Complications
- Stroke
- Longer ICU and hospital LOS
- Disadvantages
- No positive pressure ventilation systems, laminar
air flow or restricted personnel entry
34(No Transcript)
35(No Transcript)
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38Wire Cutters
39Wire Cutters
40Forceps/Pickups
41Chest Retractor/Finochetto/Baby Chest
42(No Transcript)
43Lisch Blade/ Lepsche Knife
Hammer
44Vascular Clamp/Big Kelley/Mayo Clamp
45Aortic Side Biting Clamp/Satinsky Clamp
46Vascular Cross Clamp
47Vascular Cross Clamp
48Needle Holders/Drivers
Scissors
Kocher Clamps
Kelly Clamps
49DELAYED STERNAL CLOSURE
50Delayed Sternal Closure
- Occurs more often in combined procedures
- Rationale
- Provides space for edematous heart
- Minimizes harmful effects of tamponade
- Arrhythmias
- Hemodynamic instability
- /- stabilizers
- Concerns re infection
- Anticipate broad spectrum antibiotics
51Delayed Sternal Closure
- 4.2 of 3373 cardiac surgery patients
- Occurs approximately 2.0 (range 0.5-8 days) post
op - More frequently after combined cardiac surgery
(9.6) than after CABG alone (3.7) or valve
operation (2.6) - COMPLICATIONS
- Superficial sternal wound infection 1.6
- Mediastinitis 0.8
- Sternal dehiscence in 3 (2.4) patients
- Christenson, J., Maurice, J., Simonet, F.,
Velebit, V. Schmuziger, M. (1996). Open chest
and delayed sternal closure after cardiac
surgery. European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic
Surgery, (10), pp. 305-311
52Delayed Sternal Closure
- RESULTS 78.9 survived and were discharged an
average of 8.6 days after closure. Mortality was
related to indications for OC - low cardiac output 38.6
- hemodynamic collapse on closure 0
- diffuse bleeding 33.3
- arrhythmias 27.3
- Christenson, J., Maurice, J., Simonet, F.,
Velebit, V. Schmuziger, M. (1996). Open chest
and delayed sternal closure after cardiac
surgery. European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic
Surgery, (10), pp. 305-311
53Lynn McGugan Clark, ACNP, CTICU mcgug001_at_mc.duke.e
du
54References
- Anthi, A., Tzelepis, G. E., Alivizatos, P.,
Michalis, A., Palatianos, G. M., Geroulanos, S.
(1998). Unexpected cardiac arrest after cardiac
surgery incidence, predisposing causes, and
outcome of open chest cardiopulmonary
resuscitation. Chest, 113(1), pp. 15-19. - Charalambous, C. P., Zipitis, C. S. Keenan, D.
J. (2006). Chest reexploration in the intensive
care unit after cardiac surgery a safe
alternative to returning to the operating
theatre. Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 81(1), pp.
191-4. - Dulak, S. B. (2005). Hands-on help. Cardiac
tamponade. RN, 68(4), pp 32ac1-4. - Hamid, M., Khan, M. U. Bashour, A. C. (2006).
Diagnostic value of chest X-ray and
echocardiography for cardiac tamponade in post
cardiac surgery patients. Journal of the Pakistan
Medical Association, 56(3), pp. 104-107. - Lewis, A. M. (1999). Cardiovascular emergency!
Nursing, 29(6), pp. 49-51. - Moulton, M. J., Creswell, L. L., Mackey, M. E.,
Cox, J. L. Rosenbloom, M. (1996).
Reexploration for bleeding is a risk factor for
adverse outcomes after cardiac operations.
Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovasc Surgery, 111,
pp. 10371046. - Mackay, J. H., Powell, S. J., Osgathorp, J.
Rozario, C. J. (2002). Six year prospective
audit of chest reopening after cardiac arrest.
European Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery,
22(3), pp. 421-425. - Richardson, L., Dissanayake, A. Dunning, J.
(2007). What cardioversion protocol for
ventricular fibrillation should be followed for
patients who arrest shortly post-cardiac surgery?
Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery,
6(6), pp 799-805. Retrieved January 7, 2008 from
http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17693437?ordina
lpos1itoolEntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_R
esultsPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum - Wahba, A., Gotz, W. Birnbaum, D. E. (1997).
Outcome of cardiopulmonary resuscitation
following open heart surgery. Scandinavian
Cardiovascular Journal, 31(3), pp. 147-149.