The Clinical Value of Routine Chest Radiographs in the First 24 Hours After Cardiac Surgery
Autor: | Peter M. Rosseel, Nardo J. M. van der Meer, M. Bentala, Tom A. Rijpstra, Marcus J. Schultz, Cristy L. M. van den Hombergh, Homme A. J. Dijkstra, Anke Kröner, Martijn Tolsma |
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Přispěvatelé: | Other Research, Anesthesiology, Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, Intensive Care Medicine |
Rok vydání: | 2011 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors Radiography law.invention Postoperative Complications law medicine Humans Clinical significance Postoperative Period Prospective Studies Cardiac Surgical Procedures Prospective cohort study Aged business.industry Incidence (epidemiology) Middle Aged Intensive care unit Surgery Cardiac surgery Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine Clinical value Female Radiography Thoracic Radiology business |
Zdroj: | Anesthesia and analgesia, 112(1), 139-142. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins |
ISSN: | 0003-2999 |
DOI: | 10.1213/ane.0b013e3181fdf6b7 |
Popis: | Chest radiographs (CXRs) are obtained frequently in the intensive care unit (ICU). Whether these CXRs should be performed routinely or on clinical indication only is often debated. The aim of our study was to investigate the incidence and clinical significance of abnormalities found on routine postoperative CXRs in cardiac surgery patients and whether a restricted use of CXRs would influence the number of significant findings. We prospectively included all consecutive patients who underwent cardiac surgery during a 2-month period. Two or three CXRs were performed in the first 24 hours of ICU stay. After ICU admission and after drain removal, a clinical assessment was performed before a CXR was obtained. All CXR abnormalities were noted and it was also noted whether they led to an intervention. For the admission CXR and the drain removal CXR, a comparison was made between CXRs clinically indicated by the physician and those not clinically indicated. Two hundred fourteen patients were included. The majority of patients underwent coronary arterial bypass grafting (60%), heart valve surgery (21%), or a combination of these (14%). In total, 534 CXRs were performed (2.5 per patient). Abnormalities were found on 179 CXRs (33.5%) and 13 CXR results led to an intervention (2.4%). The association between clinically indicated CXRs and the presence of CXR abnormalities was poor. For 32 (10%) of the 321 admission and drain removal CXRs, clinical indications were stated by the physician beforehand. If these CXRs would not have been performed routinely, 68 abnormalities would have been missed, of which 5 led to an intervention. Partial elimination of routine CXRs in the first 24 hours after cardiac surgery seems possible for the majority of patients, but it is limited by the insensitivity of clinical assessment in predicting clinically important abnormalities detectable by CXRs |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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