Berlin Heart EXCOR ventricular assist device (VAD) implantation in children is widely used as bridge-to-heart transplantation. Berlin left ventricular assist device (LVAD) support as a bridge to recovery is rare. There is a scarcity of literature describing systematic evaluation in pediatric VAD explantation. Patient 1. A 3 month old boy presented with acute heart failure secondary to myocarditis. An echocardiogram demonstrated severely depressed left ventricular function. He required ECMO cannulation and was decannulated 11 days later. He continued to be hemodynamically unstable and required Berlin LVAD implantation with the intent to bridge to transplantation. Patient 2. A 3 month old boy presented initially with a heart rate of 250 beats/min and an electrocardiogram showed multifocal atrial tachycardia. An echocardiogram showed severely decreased left ventricular function. He was placed on ECMO due to unstable hemodynamics. He did not tolerate ECMO decannulation due to persistent chaotic atrial rhythm and underwent Berlin LVAD implantation with the intent to bridge to transplantation. After both patients showed evidence of myocardial recovery, they underwent a weaning protocol that includes: screening, trial-off with echocardiography, and trial-off in the catheterization suite. Our patients met the criteria and underwent successful explantation. Explantation of VAD can be successfully performed even in young children with appropriate candidate selection and a multidisciplinary and systematic approach.
Introduction:
The number of adults requiring surgeries for CHD is increasing. We sought to evaluate the utility of the vasoactive-ventilation-renal (VVR) score as a predictor of prolonged length of stay in adults following CHD surgery.
Methods:
This is a retrospective review of 158 adult patients who underwent CHD surgery involving cardiopulmonary bypass. VVR score was calculated upon arrival to ICU and every 6 hours for the first 48 hours post-operatively. Our primary outcome was prolonged length of stay defined as hospital length of stay greater than 75th percentile for the cohort (≥8 days).
Results:
The study cohort had a median age of 25.6 years (18–60 years), and 83 (52.5%) were male. The groups with and without prolonged length of stay were comparable in age, gender, race, and surgical severity score. VVR score was significantly higher at all time points in the group with prolonged length of stay. The first post-operative day peak VVR score ≥13 had a sensitivity of 81% and specificity of 75% for predicting prolonged length of stay (p = 0.0001). On regression analysis, peak VVR score during the first day was independently associated with prolonged length of stay.
Conclusions:
Peak VVR score during the first post-operative day was a strong predictor of prolonged length of stay in adults following CHD surgery.
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