• Anaesth Intensive Care · Apr 2005

    Diagnosis and outcome from suspected mesenteric ischaemia following cardiac surgery.

    • M Edwards, D Sidebotham, M Smith, J V Leemput, and B Anderson.
    • Green Lane Hospital, Green Lane West, Epsom, Auckland, New Zealand.
    • Anaesth Intensive Care. 2005 Apr 1;33(2):210-7.

    AbstractA three-year retrospective chart review was undertaken of all post-cardiothoracic ICU patients who underwent laparotomy for suspected mesenteric ischaemia, or who had the diagnosis confirmed at post mortem. The aim was to compare the clinical and diagnostic characteristics of cardiothoracic patients with suspected mesenteric ischaemia with patients who had a confirmed diagnosis. There were 3024 admissions to the cardiothoracic ICU over the three-year period. Twenty-six laparotomies were performed for suspected mesenteric ischaemia and 15 were positive for mesenteric ischaemia. The overall incidence of mesenteric ischaemia was 17/3024 (0.6%). Mortality for patients with mesenteric ischaemia was 13/17 (76%). Ischaemia was limited to a single segment of bowel in the four survivors. Mortality in patients who had a negative laparotomy for suspected mesenteric ischaemia was 7/11 (64%), attributable to cardiovascular failure (2/11) and multi-organ dysfunction syndrome (5/11). No clinical, biochemical or haematological test was discriminatory for mesenteric ischaemia. In patients with proven ischaemia, 7/13 plain abdominal radiographs were positive for ischaemia and 7/7 radiographs were negative for ischaemia in patients with no ischaemia (P = 0.05, PPV 1.0, NPV 0.5, sensitivity 54%, specificity 100%). Neither routine clinical investigations nor plain abdominal radiography reliably diagnose mesenteric ischaemia when the diagnosis is suspected clinically. Early laparotomy is recommended in these patients and further investigation may delay this procedure unnecessarily. The presence of mesenteric ischaemia identifies a cohort of patients with high mortality.

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