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1.
Journal of the Saudi Heart Association. 2016; 28 (1): 1-6
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-175068

ABSTRACT

Objective: Injury to the recurrent laryngeal nerve can lead to significant morbidity during congenital cardiac surgery. The objective is to expand on the limited understanding of the severity and recovery of this iatrogenic condition


Design: A six-year retrospective review of all congenital heart operations at a single institution from January 1, 2008 to December 31, 2013 was performed. All patients with documented vocal cord paralysis on laryngoscopic examination comprised the study cohort. Evaluation of time to vocal cord recovery and need for further surgical intervention was the primary focus


Results: The incidence of post-operative vocal cord paralysis was 1.1% [32 out of 3036 patients; 95% confidence interval: 0.7-1.5%]. The majority were left-sided injuries [71%]. Overall rate of recovery was 61% with a median time of 10 months in those who recovered, and a total follow up of 46 months. Due to feeding complications, 45% of patients required gastrostomy tube after the injury, and these patients were found to have longer duration of post-operative days of intubation [median 10 vs. 5 days, p = 0.03], ICU length of stay [50 vs. 8 days, p = 0.002], and hospital length of stay [92 vs. 41 days, p = 0.01]. No pre-operative variables were identified as predictive of recovery or need for gastrostomy placement


Conclusion: Recurrent laryngeal nerve injury is a serious complication of congenital heart surgery that impacts post-operative morbidity, in some cases leading to a need for further intervention, in particular, gastrostomy tube placement. A prospective, multi-center study is needed to fully evaluate factors that influence severity and time to recovery


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Thoracic Surgery , Retrospective Studies , Vocal Cord Paralysis , Gastrostomy , Heart Defects, Congenital/surgery , Patient Outcome Assessment
2.
Journal of the Saudi Heart Association. 2015; 27 (1): 18-22
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-154934

ABSTRACT

There are limited data on the relationship between the administered dose of recombinant factor seven [rFVIIa] and the development of adverse clinical outcomes after congenital heart surgery. This single institution case series reports on dosing, adverse events, and blood product usage after the administration of rFVIIa in the congenital heart surgery patient population. A retrospective review identified 16 consecutive pediatric patients at an academic, free-standing, children's hospital who received rFVIIa to curtail bleeding following congenital heart surgery between April 2004 and June 2012. Patients were assessed for survival to hospital discharge versus in-hospital mortality and the presence or absence of a major neurological event during inpatient hospitalization. The median age at surgery was 6.8 months [range: 3 days-42 years]. Seven patients [44%] survived to hospital discharge and nine patients [56%] died. The cause of mortality included major neurological events [44%], uncontrolled bleeding [33%], and sepsis [23%]. Eight patients [50%] required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation support following congenital heart surgery. The median cumulative rFVIIa dose administered was 97 mcg/kg, and the median cumulative amount of blood products administered was 452 ml/kg. In conclusion, this case series underscores the need to prospectively evaluate the effect that rFVIIa has on patient survival and the incidence of adverse events, including thrombotic and major neurological events, in congenital heart surgery patients. Ideally, a randomized, multicenter study would provide the sufficient numbers of patients and events to test these relationships

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