Publication | Closed Access
A retrospective survey of fibrinolysis as an indicator of poor outcome after cardiopulmonary bypass and a possible early sign of systemic inflammation syndrome
20
Citations
1
References
2000
Year
Adult Cardiac SurgeryCardiac AnaesthesiaPoor OutcomeAcute Myocardial InfarctionInflammationThrombosisSystemic Inflammation SyndromeVascular SurgeryInflammatory MarkerAtherosclerosisCardiologyCardiothoracic SurgeryMyocardial InfarctionFibrinolysisCardiovascular DiseaseRetrospective SurveyFibrinolytic PatientsPatient SafetyLy30 IndexCoagulopathyMedicineAnticoagulantAnesthesiology
A retrospective survey was undertaken of 142 adults who had undergone cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. According to the manufacturer's instructions for thromboelastography, patients were identified as showing evidence of fibrinolysis if after coming off bypass the Ly30 index was ≥7.5%. In the 20 fibrinolytic patients, fibrinolysis was readily corrected by tranexamic acid but these patients needed more colloid and more vasopressor support than the non-fibrinolytic patients. There were three deaths, all in the fibrinolytic patients. It is possible that fibrinolysis is a marker for onset of systemic inflammation syndrome. It is recommended that, until the association between fibrinolysis and worse outcome is investigated further, patients showing fibrinolysis early after cardiopulmonary bypass should not be discharged too soon from intensive care.
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