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Effect of Acute Hypercapnia on Outcomes and Predictive Risk Factors for Complications among Patients Receiving Bronchoscopic Interventions under General Anesthesia

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of acute hypercapnia on surgery outcomes among patients receiving bronchoscopic interventions under general anesthesia. Furthermore, independent predictive factors for surgery complications were analyzed. METHOD: A total of 323 patients...

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Autores principales: Cheng, Qinghao, Zhang, Jieli, Wang, Hongwu, Zhang, Rujin, Yue, Yun, Li, Lei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4492548/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26147645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130771
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author Cheng, Qinghao
Zhang, Jieli
Wang, Hongwu
Zhang, Rujin
Yue, Yun
Li, Lei
author_facet Cheng, Qinghao
Zhang, Jieli
Wang, Hongwu
Zhang, Rujin
Yue, Yun
Li, Lei
author_sort Cheng, Qinghao
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of acute hypercapnia on surgery outcomes among patients receiving bronchoscopic interventions under general anesthesia. Furthermore, independent predictive factors for surgery complications were analyzed. METHOD: A total of 323 patients with airway stenosis were enrolled in this retrospective study. Each patient underwent interventional rigid bronchoscopy under general anesthesia. Arterial blood gas (ABG) was measured intraoperatively. In light of PaCO(2) levels in ABG, patients were divided into three groups: Group C (control) (PaCO(2):≤ 60 mmHg), Group M (moderate) (PaCO(2):61–100 mmHg), and Group S (severe) (PaCO(2): >100 mmHg). Parameters, including PaO(2) levels and recovery delays, were compared across three groups. Complications among patients receiving bronchoscopic interventions were evaluated as well. Independent predictive factors for surgery related complications were analyzed by multivariable regression method. RESULTS: Significant differences in weight (p=0.04), ASA IV (p=0.008), dyspnea index (p=0.003),COPD (p=0.02), dynamic airway collapse (p=0.002), severe stenosis severity (p=0.02), and stenosis locations among three groups were observed. Mild (PaCO(2):~60 mmHg) to moderate (PaCO(2):60–100 mmHg) hypercapnia was not associated with delayed recovery, whereas severe hypercapnia (PaCO(2):>100 mmHg) was associated with delayed recovery, as well as declined PaO(2) (p=0.00) and elevated blood glucose levels (p=0.00). The complications of bronchoscopic interventions included postoperative congestive heart failure (14 cases, 4.3%), tracheorrhagia (8 cases, 2.5%), delayed recovery (19 cases, 5.9%), and transfers to ICU after surgery (10 cases, 3.1%). The multivariable regression analysis showed that procedure duration (p=0.003), lobectomy (p=0.007), dynamic airway collapse (p=0.01), severe bronchial stenosis (p=0.01) and hypercapnia (p=0.02) were independent predictive factors for surgery related complications. CONCLUSIONS: Acute hypercapnia lower than 100 mmHg was not associated with detrimental consequences, whereas severe hypercapnia (PaCO(2): >100 mmHg) was associated with lower levels of PaO(2). Hypercapnia was an independent predictive factor for bronchoscopic intervention complication, which may help physicians to optimize the therapeutic choices.
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spelling pubmed-44925482015-07-15 Effect of Acute Hypercapnia on Outcomes and Predictive Risk Factors for Complications among Patients Receiving Bronchoscopic Interventions under General Anesthesia Cheng, Qinghao Zhang, Jieli Wang, Hongwu Zhang, Rujin Yue, Yun Li, Lei PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of acute hypercapnia on surgery outcomes among patients receiving bronchoscopic interventions under general anesthesia. Furthermore, independent predictive factors for surgery complications were analyzed. METHOD: A total of 323 patients with airway stenosis were enrolled in this retrospective study. Each patient underwent interventional rigid bronchoscopy under general anesthesia. Arterial blood gas (ABG) was measured intraoperatively. In light of PaCO(2) levels in ABG, patients were divided into three groups: Group C (control) (PaCO(2):≤ 60 mmHg), Group M (moderate) (PaCO(2):61–100 mmHg), and Group S (severe) (PaCO(2): >100 mmHg). Parameters, including PaO(2) levels and recovery delays, were compared across three groups. Complications among patients receiving bronchoscopic interventions were evaluated as well. Independent predictive factors for surgery related complications were analyzed by multivariable regression method. RESULTS: Significant differences in weight (p=0.04), ASA IV (p=0.008), dyspnea index (p=0.003),COPD (p=0.02), dynamic airway collapse (p=0.002), severe stenosis severity (p=0.02), and stenosis locations among three groups were observed. Mild (PaCO(2):~60 mmHg) to moderate (PaCO(2):60–100 mmHg) hypercapnia was not associated with delayed recovery, whereas severe hypercapnia (PaCO(2):>100 mmHg) was associated with delayed recovery, as well as declined PaO(2) (p=0.00) and elevated blood glucose levels (p=0.00). The complications of bronchoscopic interventions included postoperative congestive heart failure (14 cases, 4.3%), tracheorrhagia (8 cases, 2.5%), delayed recovery (19 cases, 5.9%), and transfers to ICU after surgery (10 cases, 3.1%). The multivariable regression analysis showed that procedure duration (p=0.003), lobectomy (p=0.007), dynamic airway collapse (p=0.01), severe bronchial stenosis (p=0.01) and hypercapnia (p=0.02) were independent predictive factors for surgery related complications. CONCLUSIONS: Acute hypercapnia lower than 100 mmHg was not associated with detrimental consequences, whereas severe hypercapnia (PaCO(2): >100 mmHg) was associated with lower levels of PaO(2). Hypercapnia was an independent predictive factor for bronchoscopic intervention complication, which may help physicians to optimize the therapeutic choices. Public Library of Science 2015-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4492548/ /pubmed/26147645 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130771 Text en © 2015 Cheng et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cheng, Qinghao
Zhang, Jieli
Wang, Hongwu
Zhang, Rujin
Yue, Yun
Li, Lei
Effect of Acute Hypercapnia on Outcomes and Predictive Risk Factors for Complications among Patients Receiving Bronchoscopic Interventions under General Anesthesia
title Effect of Acute Hypercapnia on Outcomes and Predictive Risk Factors for Complications among Patients Receiving Bronchoscopic Interventions under General Anesthesia
title_full Effect of Acute Hypercapnia on Outcomes and Predictive Risk Factors for Complications among Patients Receiving Bronchoscopic Interventions under General Anesthesia
title_fullStr Effect of Acute Hypercapnia on Outcomes and Predictive Risk Factors for Complications among Patients Receiving Bronchoscopic Interventions under General Anesthesia
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Acute Hypercapnia on Outcomes and Predictive Risk Factors for Complications among Patients Receiving Bronchoscopic Interventions under General Anesthesia
title_short Effect of Acute Hypercapnia on Outcomes and Predictive Risk Factors for Complications among Patients Receiving Bronchoscopic Interventions under General Anesthesia
title_sort effect of acute hypercapnia on outcomes and predictive risk factors for complications among patients receiving bronchoscopic interventions under general anesthesia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4492548/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26147645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130771
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