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Clinical impact of intraoperative hyperlactatemia during craniotomy

OBJECT: Patients often develop markedly elevated serum lactate levels during craniotomy although the reason for this is not entirely understood. Elevated lactate levels have been associated with poor outcomes in critically ill septic shock patients, as well as patients undergoing abdominal and cardi...

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Autores principales: Romano, Diana, Deiner, Stacie, Cherukuri, Anjali, Boateng, Bernard, Shrivastava, Raj, Mocco, J., Hadjipanayis, Constantinos, Yong, Raymund, Kellner, Christopher, Yaeger, Kurt, Lin, Hung-Mo, Brallier, Jess
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6812741/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31647826
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224016
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author Romano, Diana
Deiner, Stacie
Cherukuri, Anjali
Boateng, Bernard
Shrivastava, Raj
Mocco, J.
Hadjipanayis, Constantinos
Yong, Raymund
Kellner, Christopher
Yaeger, Kurt
Lin, Hung-Mo
Brallier, Jess
author_facet Romano, Diana
Deiner, Stacie
Cherukuri, Anjali
Boateng, Bernard
Shrivastava, Raj
Mocco, J.
Hadjipanayis, Constantinos
Yong, Raymund
Kellner, Christopher
Yaeger, Kurt
Lin, Hung-Mo
Brallier, Jess
author_sort Romano, Diana
collection PubMed
description OBJECT: Patients often develop markedly elevated serum lactate levels during craniotomy although the reason for this is not entirely understood. Elevated lactate levels have been associated with poor outcomes in critically ill septic shock patients, as well as patients undergoing abdominal and cardiac surgeries. We investigated whether elevated lactate in craniotomy patients is associated with neurologic complications (new neurological deficits) as well as systemic complications. METHODS: We performed a cohort study of elective craniotomy patients. Demographic and intraoperative data were collected, as well as three timed intraoperative arterial lactate values. Additional lactate, creatinine and troponin values were collected immediately postoperatively as well as 12 and 24 hours postoperatively. Assessment for neurologic deficit was performed at 6 hours and 2 weeks postoperatively. Hospital length-of-stay and 30-day mortality were collected. RESULTS: Interim analysis of 81 patients showed that no patient had postoperative myocardial infarction, renal failure, or mortality within 30 days of surgery. There was no difference in the incidence of new neurologic deficit in patients with or without elevated lactate (10/26, 38.5% vs. 15/55 27.3%, p = 0.31). Median length of stay was significantly longer in patients with elevated lactate (6.5 vs. 3 days, p = 0.003). Study enrollment was terminated early due to futility (futility index 0.16). CONCLUSION: Elevated intraoperative serum lactate was not associated with new postoperative neurologic deficits, other end organ events, or 30 day mortality. Serum lactate was related to longer hospital stay.
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spelling pubmed-68127412019-11-03 Clinical impact of intraoperative hyperlactatemia during craniotomy Romano, Diana Deiner, Stacie Cherukuri, Anjali Boateng, Bernard Shrivastava, Raj Mocco, J. Hadjipanayis, Constantinos Yong, Raymund Kellner, Christopher Yaeger, Kurt Lin, Hung-Mo Brallier, Jess PLoS One Research Article OBJECT: Patients often develop markedly elevated serum lactate levels during craniotomy although the reason for this is not entirely understood. Elevated lactate levels have been associated with poor outcomes in critically ill septic shock patients, as well as patients undergoing abdominal and cardiac surgeries. We investigated whether elevated lactate in craniotomy patients is associated with neurologic complications (new neurological deficits) as well as systemic complications. METHODS: We performed a cohort study of elective craniotomy patients. Demographic and intraoperative data were collected, as well as three timed intraoperative arterial lactate values. Additional lactate, creatinine and troponin values were collected immediately postoperatively as well as 12 and 24 hours postoperatively. Assessment for neurologic deficit was performed at 6 hours and 2 weeks postoperatively. Hospital length-of-stay and 30-day mortality were collected. RESULTS: Interim analysis of 81 patients showed that no patient had postoperative myocardial infarction, renal failure, or mortality within 30 days of surgery. There was no difference in the incidence of new neurologic deficit in patients with or without elevated lactate (10/26, 38.5% vs. 15/55 27.3%, p = 0.31). Median length of stay was significantly longer in patients with elevated lactate (6.5 vs. 3 days, p = 0.003). Study enrollment was terminated early due to futility (futility index 0.16). CONCLUSION: Elevated intraoperative serum lactate was not associated with new postoperative neurologic deficits, other end organ events, or 30 day mortality. Serum lactate was related to longer hospital stay. Public Library of Science 2019-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6812741/ /pubmed/31647826 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224016 Text en © 2019 Romano 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Romano, Diana
Deiner, Stacie
Cherukuri, Anjali
Boateng, Bernard
Shrivastava, Raj
Mocco, J.
Hadjipanayis, Constantinos
Yong, Raymund
Kellner, Christopher
Yaeger, Kurt
Lin, Hung-Mo
Brallier, Jess
Clinical impact of intraoperative hyperlactatemia during craniotomy
title Clinical impact of intraoperative hyperlactatemia during craniotomy
title_full Clinical impact of intraoperative hyperlactatemia during craniotomy
title_fullStr Clinical impact of intraoperative hyperlactatemia during craniotomy
title_full_unstemmed Clinical impact of intraoperative hyperlactatemia during craniotomy
title_short Clinical impact of intraoperative hyperlactatemia during craniotomy
title_sort clinical impact of intraoperative hyperlactatemia during craniotomy
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6812741/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31647826
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224016
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