RESUMO
Blood-free pediatric surgery is increasingly used for surgical correction of simple cardiopathies. Herein, we describe a complex cardiopathy, arterial switch operation and ventricular septal defect, with pre-operative thrombocytopenia in a 4.5 Kg baby treated with warm surgery and intermittent warm blood microplegia without any blood product. Bypass time was 89 min and aortic cross-clamp time 61 min. The maximal length of warm ischemia (time between microplegia injections) was 42 minutes. The postoperative course was uneventful. The patient was weaned off the ventilator after 7 hours, was discharged from the ICU on day 2 and was discharged from the hospital on day 7. The two main factors involved in this result were high pre-operative hemoglobin level and bypass technique with small prime volume, microplegia and warm perfusion. However, the success of this challenging case is also the result of teamwork and of rigorous patient care.
Assuntos
Comunicação Interventricular/cirurgia , Transposição dos Grandes Vasos/cirurgia , Isquemia Quente/métodos , Parada Cardíaca Induzida/métodos , Comunicação Interventricular/complicações , Humanos , Lactente , Masculino , Trombocitopenia/complicações , Trombocitopenia/cirurgia , Transposição dos Grandes Vasos/complicaçõesRESUMO
As a result of improvements in early outcomes, long-term neurologicalal outcomes are becoming a major issue in pediatric cardiac surgery. The mechanisms of brain injury are numerous, but a vast majority of injuries are impervious to therapy and only a few are modifiable. The quality of perfusion during cardiac surgery is a modifiable factor and cerebral monitoring during bypass is the way to assess the quality of intra-operative cerebral perfusion. Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), as a diagnostic tool, has gained in popularity within the perfusion community. However, NIRS is becoming the standard of care before its scientific validation. This manuscript relates four clinical cases, demonstrating the limitations of NIRS monitoring during pediatric cardiac surgery as well as uncertainties about the interpretation of the recorded values. The clinical relevance of cerebral oxymetry is needed before the use of NIRS as a decision making tool. Multimodal brain monitoring with NIRS, trans-cranial Doppler and electroencephalogram are currently under way in several pediatric centers. The benefit of this time-consuming and expensive monitoring system has yet to be demonstrated.