Publication | Closed Access
Renal Failure After Open Heart Surgery
151
Citations
28
References
1976
Year
Heart FailureAdult Cardiac SurgeryDialysis TherapySurgeryGrave PrognosisRenal FunctionSepsisAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseCardiologyCardiothoracic SurgerySerum CreatinineHemodialysisKidney FailureRenal FailureEnd-stage Renal DiseaseUrologyCreatinine ConcentrationsMedicineNephrologyAnesthesiology
One hundred fifty of 490 patients undergoing open heart surgery had renal failure attributable to cardiopulmonary bypass. In 69, serum creatinine concentrations did not exceed 2 mg/dl and returned to normal by the fourth postoperative day. In 60 patients, serum creatinine attained levels between 2 and 5 mg/dl, oliguria did not develop, and recovery of renal function occurred within 4 to 37 days. Serum creatinine increased to levels exceeding 5 mg/dl in 21 patients, 11 of whom were oliguric. Despite dialysis, 14 of these patients died from cardiac causes or sepsis. Prolonged cardiopulmonary bypass time, hypotension, oliguria, low output syndrome, and hemoglobinemia during open heart surgery correlated with the development of renal failure postoperatively. Although severe renal failure was an uncommon complication after open heart surgery, its occurrence carried a grave prognosis.
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