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Cardiology in the young · Aug 2011
Comparative StudyPoor post-operative growth in infants with two-ventricle physiology.
- Jeffrey B Anderson, Bradley S Marino, Sharon Y Irving, J Felipe García-España, Chitra Ravishankar, Virginia A Stallings, and Barbara Medoff-Cooper.
- Division of Cardiology, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45255, USA. jeffrey.anderson@cchmc.org
- Cardiol Young. 2011 Aug 1;21(4):421-9.
BackgroundAdequate nutritional support is essential for normal infant growth and development. Infants with congenital cardiac disease are known to be at risk for growth failure. We sought to describe perioperative growth in infants undergoing surgical repair of two-ventricle congenital cardiac disease and assess for predictors of their pattern of growth.Materials and methodsFull-term infants who underwent surgical repair of two-ventricle congenital cardiac disease at a single institution were enrolled in a retrospective cohort study performed following a larger prospective study. Infants with facial, gastrointestinal, or neurologic anomalies, trisomy chromosomal abnormality, birth weight less than 2500 grams, or those transferred to another institution before discharge home were excluded. The primary outcome was change in weight-for-age z score from surgery to discharge. Our secondary outcome variable was post-operative hospital length of stay.ResultsA total of 76 infants met the inclusion criteria. Medain age at surgery was 5 days with a range from 1 to 44. The median weight-for-age z score at surgery was -0.2 with a range from -2.9 to 2.8 and by discharge had dropped to -1.2 with a range from -3.4 to 1.8. The median change in weight-for-age z score from surgery to discharge was -1.0 with a range from -2.3 to 0.2. Delayed post-operative nutrition (p < 0.001) and reintubation following initial post-operative extubation (p = 0.001) were associated with decrease in weight-for-age z score.ConclusionsInfants undergoing repair of two-ventricle congenital cardiac disease had poor growth in the post-operative period. This may be mitigated by early initiation of post-operative nutrition.
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