Three patients presenting for elective aortic surgery were studied before operation and for up to 3 days after operation with ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring and nocturnal pulse oximetry. Supplementary oxygen was administered for the first 2 days after operation and withdrawn on the 3rd morning after operation. Heart rate remained increased for the first 3 days after operation. Two patients developed episodes of myocardial ischaemia during the first 48 h after operation while their arterial oxygen saturation remained greater than 90%. On the third day, and during the third night after operation, both the severity and duration of myocardial ischaemia increased markedly, associated with arterial hypoxaemia. A temporal relationship between decreases in oxygen saturation and fluctuations in ST segment level were observed in the three patients.
We made simultaneous measurements of pulmonary hemodynamics, cardiac output, and right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF) to assess the right ventricular function in 14 patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension as a result of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). From these measurements, the right ventricular end-systolic pressure/volume relationship could be calculated and used to assess right ventricular contractility. Eight of the patients were clinically stable, without edema, and 6 presented acutely with gross edema, indicating decompensated cor pulmonale. Measurements were made at rest, while breathing air and oxygen. Although mean pulmonary arterial pressure (Ppa) was similar in those with (Ppa = 33 +/- 6 mm Hg) and without edema (Ppa = 30 +/- 8 mm Hg, p greater than 0.05), RVEF was lower in edematous (RVEF = 0.23 +/- 0.11) compared with non-edematous patients (RVEF = 0.47 +/- 0.04, p less than 0.01). Cardiac output was normal in both groups. The mean right ventricular end-systolic pressure/volume ratio (P/V) was lower in those patients with edema (P/V = 0.41 +/- 0.27), as compared with those without edema (P/V = 1.69 +/- 0.35, p less than 0.05), as a result of an increase in right ventricular end-systolic volume index. Similarly, left ventricular end-systolic volumes were higher in edematous than in non-edematous patients. Breathing 1 to 3 L/min of oxygen for 30 min decreased total pulmonary vascular resistance (p less than 0.05) in those patients without edema, but not in patients with edema. Oxygen did not change RVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), or the ventricular end-systolic P/V relationships.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
We have studied the severity and duration of nocturnal hypoxaemia before operation and for the first five nights after operation after elective major abdominal vascular surgery. Oxygen supplementation was almost 100% effective in keeping oxygen saturation greater than 90% during the early postoperative period; however, 50% of patients spent prolonged periods with an SpO2 less than 85% during at least one night after operation. The risk of severe hypoxaemia persists well beyond the current prescription of supplementary oxygen in these high risk patients. A significant association exists between the mean preoperative overnight saturation value and the nocturnal saturation observed subsequently in the later postoperative period.
SummaryTwenty-four patients (23 male) who presented for aortic reconstructive surgery were studied with pulse oximetry on a pre-operative night and during the first five postoperative nights. Patients with five or more dips in oxygen saturation of greater than 4% (with a prompt recovery back toward baseline of 3% or more) per hour of monitoring were classified as having a significant abnormality of respiration. Pre-operatively, four of 24 patients ( I 7%) demonstrated such an abnormality. Postoperatively. 12patients (50%) met these criteria on at least one of the first five postoperative nights and six of these had two or more nights with severe episodic hypoxaemia. Frequent severe episodic dips in arterial oxygen saturation (to less than 85% saturation) occurred in the late postoperative period at a time when oxygen therapy would usually have been discontinued. Pre-opera five overnight pulse oximetry studies fail to predict the development of abnormal respiratory patterns in the postoperative period in the majority of patients. Key words Surgery; abdominal.Complications; postoperative hypoxaemia. Measurement techniques; pulse oximetry.Postoperative hypoxaemia may be persistent or episodic. Persistent hypoxaemia is usually the result of intrapulmonary complications which affect ventilation/perfusion relationships in the lung. Episodic hypoxaemia is usually the result of alterations in central neural respiratory drive to the respiratory and accessory respiratory muscles, which give rise to upper airway obstruction or periodic breathing patterns with central apnoea. These episodic phenomena occur almost exclusively during sleep.Several studies [ 1-31 have shown that abnormal patterns of respiration occur commonly in the early postoperative period. Catley et al. [ I ] in 1985 observed frequent episodic dips in oxygen saturation in patients who received an intravenous infusion of morphine during the first 16 h after surgery. These episodes, which occurred only while patients were asleep, were associated with both central and obstructive apnoeas. A recent study in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery [2] has shown that episodic dips in arterial oxygen saturation occur during the second as well as the first night after surgery. These studies reflect respiratory patterns in the relatively early postoperative period. However, little is known regarding the incidence, duration and severity of episodic hypoxaemia during the late postoperative period when supplementary oxygen has normally been discontinued. Furthermore, the clinical significance of such episodes in the generation of morbidity in the postoperative period, particularly in patients at risk from ischaemic heart disease, is unexplored.The aim of the present study was to document, in patients undergoing major abdominal vascular surgery, the pre-operative incidence of nocturnal episodic dips in arterial oxygen saturation, and to compare this with the incidence and severity of episodic nocturnal hypoxaemia occurring during the first five postoperative nigh...
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