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Venous-arterial oxygen saturation and serum lactate in the postoperative period of cardiac surgery

Arch Cardiol Mex. 2022;92(4):469-475. doi: 10.24875/ACM.21000348.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Oxygen saturation and lactate are markers of tissue hypoxia; they are obtained from central venous and mixed venous sample of the pulmonary artery. The simultaneous behavior of these parameters in the postoperative period of cardiac surgery is unknown.

OBJECTIVE: To characterize the lactate and oxygen saturation of the venous-arterial circuit of the postoperative patient from cardiac surgery.

METHODS: Design: Analytical cross-sectional. In consecutive patients after cardiac surgery, serum lactate and oxygen saturation of the venous-arterial circuit were obtained. The variables were reported with median (25.75 percentiles). They were analyzed with Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA and respective adjustment, Spearman correlation, the descriptive Bland-Altman statistic and intraclass correlation coefficient (95% confidence interval). A p < 0.05 was considered significant.

RESULTS: 244 blood samples from 61 patients were studied. Women 30 (49%). (Oxygen saturation) [lactate] were: arterial 98 (95.3, 99.4%) and 1.7 (1.1, 2.1); peripheral venous 85 (75.4, 94%) and [1.9 (1.35, 2.3)]; central venous 68.8 (58.74, 70.2%) and 1.8 (1.3, 2.3); mixed central venous 66.8 (61.2, 73.1%) and 1.8 (1.3, 2.2), p < 0.05. The best intraclass correlation coefficient for oxygen saturation were from central vein to mixed central vein 0.856 (0.760,0.914); and lactate: 0.954 (0.923, 0.972).

CONCLUSIONS: The oxygen saturation differs in the venous-arterial circuit unlike lactate where they are similar. The best values of the intraclass correlation coefficient for lactate and oxygen saturation were those obtained in central vein and mixed central vein.

PMID:36413688 | DOI:10.24875/ACM.21000348

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