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- L Romero and C de Virgilio.
- Department of Surgery, Harbor UCLA Medical Center, 1000 W Carson St, Torrance, CA 90509, USA.
- Arch Surg Chicago. 2001 Dec 1; 136 (12): 1370-6.
HypothesisWe provide an updated algorithm for approaching preoperative cardiac risk assessment in patients undergoing noncardiac surgery.DesignA National Library of Medicine PubMed literature search was performed dating back to 1985 using the keywords "preoperative cardiac risk for noncardiac surgery." This search was restricted to English language articles involving human subjects.ResultsPatient-specific and operation-specific cardiac risk can be determined clinically. Patients with major cardiac risk factors have a high incidence of perioperative cardiac complications, whereas the risk is less than 3% for low-risk patients. For intermediate-risk patients, no prospective randomized studies demonstrate the efficacy of noninvasive stress testing (dipyridamole thallium or dobutamine echocardiography) or of subsequent coronary revascularization for preventing perioperative cardiac complications. Recent studies demonstrate that perioperative beta-blockade significantly reduces the adverse cardiac event rate in intermediate-risk patients.ConclusionsMost patients with high cardiac risk should proceed with coronary angiography. Patients with low cardiac risk can proceed to surgery without noninvasive testing. For intermediate-risk patients, consideration may be given to further stress testing prior to surgery; however, in most patients, proceeding to surgery with perioperative beta-blockade is an acceptable alternative.
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