2 research outputs found

    Automated prediction of cardiorespiratory deterioration in patients with single-ventricle parallel circulation: A multicenter validation studyCentral MessagePerspective

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    Objectives: Patients with single-ventricle physiology have a significant risk of cardiorespiratory deterioration between their first- and second-stage palliation surgeries. Detection of deterioration episodes may allow for early intervention and improved outcomes. Methods: A prospective study was executed at Nationwide Children's Hospital, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and Children's Hospital Colorado to collect physiologic data of subjects with single ventricle physiology during all hospitalizations between neonatal palliation and II surgeries using the Sickbay software platform (Medical Informatics Corp). Timing of cardiorespiratory deterioration events was captured via chart review. The predictive algorithm previously developed and validated at Texas Children's Hospital was applied to these data without retraining. Standard metrics such as receiver operating curve area, positive and negative likelihood ratio, and alert rates were calculated to establish clinical performance of the predictive algorithm. Results: Our cohort consisted of 58 subjects admitted to the cardiac intensive care unit and stepdown units of participating centers over 14 months. Approximately 28,991 hours of high-resolution physiologic waveform and vital sign data were collected using the Sickbay. A total of 30 cardiorespiratory deterioration events were observed. the risk index metric generated by our algorithm was found to be both sensitive and specific for detecting impending events one to two hours in advance of overt extremis (receiver operating curve = 0.927). Conclusions: Our algorithm can provide a 1- to 2-hour advanced warning for 53.6% of all cardiorespiratory deterioration events in children with single ventricle physiology during their initial postop course as well as interstage hospitalizations after stage I palliation with only 2.5 alarms being generated per patient per day

    RBC Transfusion Induced ST Segment Variability Following the Norwood Procedure

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    Objectives:. The transfusion of stored RBCs decreases nitric oxide bioavailability, which may have an adverse effect on vascular function. We assessed the effects of RBC transfusion on coronary vascular function by evaluating the relationship between myocardial oxygen delivery and demand as evidenced by ST segment variability. Design:. Retrospective case-control study. Setting:. Nine-hundred seventy-three–bed pediatric hospital with a 54-bed cardiovascular ICU. Patients:. Seventy-three neonates with hypoplastic left heart syndrome following the Norwood procedure, 38 with a Blalock-Taussig shunt and 35 with a right ventricle to pulmonary artery shunt. Interventions:. RBC transfusion. Materials and Main Results:. High-frequency physiologic data were captured 30 minutes prior to the initiation of (baseline) and during the 120 minutes of the transfusion. A rate pressure product was calculated for each subject and used as an indicator of myocardial oxygen demand. Electrocardiogram leads (aVL, V1, II) were used to construct a 3D ST segment vector to assess ST segment variability and functioned as a surrogate indicator of myocardial ischemia. One-hundred thirty-eight transfusions occurred in the Blalock-Taussig shunt group and 139 in the right ventricle to pulmonary artery shunt group. There was no significant change in the rate pressure product for either group; however, ST segment variability progressively increased for the entire cohort during the transfusion, becoming statistically significant by the end of the transfusion. Upon subgroup analysis, this finding was noted with statistical significance in the Blalock-Taussig shunt group and trending toward significance in the right ventricle to pulmonary artery shunt group. Conclusions:. We found a significant increase in the ST segment variability and evidence of myocardial ischemia temporally associated with RBC transfusions in neonates following the Norwood procedure, specifically among those in the Blalock-Taussig shunt group, which may impact immediate and long-term outcomes
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