• Anaesth Intensive Care · Jan 2014

    Central venous oxygen saturation during high-risk general surgical procedures-relationship to complications and clinical outcomes.

    • M S Boyle, M Bennett, G W Keogh, M O'Brien, G Flynn, D W Collins, and D Bihari.
    • Intensive Care Unit and Wales Anaesthesia, Prince of Wales Hospital, New South Wales, Australia.
    • Anaesth Intensive Care. 2014 Jan 1; 42 (1): 28-36.

    AbstractMajor non-cardiac surgery is associated with postoperative morbidity, and perioperative central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO2) may be a predictor of morbidity. This pilot study aimed to define intraoperative ScvO2 and to identify factors associated with postoperative complications. ScvO2 (reflection spectrophotometry) was recorded continuously in a convenience sample of adults undergoing high-risk general surgery. Demographics, intraoperative management, surgery duration, postoperative complications and deaths within 28 days were recorded. Data from 51 patients were analysed. Two (4%) died and 24 (47%) had at least one complication (range 1 to 5). The hospital length-of-stay and duration of surgery were longer in those with complications (22.1±6.1 versus 9.6±3.6 days, P >0.0001, and 328±162 minutes versus 241±94 minutes, P=0.02, respectively). Overall, the ScvO2 was 82±8% and ranged from 40% to 97% with 17 (33%) patients having at least one episode of ScvO2 >70%. Hospital length-of-stay (P >0.0001), time ScvO2 >90% (P=0.003), surgery duration (P=0.005) and blood loss (P=0.02) were correlated with the number of complications. Using multivariate analysis, surgery duration (odds ratio 1.008 [95% confidence interval 1.002 to 1.013]; P=0.006) and change in oxygen extraction ratio (O2ER) at the end of surgery compared to the beginning (odds ratio 1.13 [95% confidence interval 1.001 to 1.28]; P=0.04) were independently associated with complications. The surgery duration and an increased O2ER are factors related to the development of postoperative complications.

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