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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2000;119:449-452
© 2000 Mosby, Inc.
GENERAL THORACIC SURGERY |
From the Department of Cardiac and Thoracic Surgery, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Address for reprints: John R. Roberts, MD, Department of Cardiac and Thoracic Surgery, Vanderbilt University, 2986 TVC, Nashville, TN 37232 (E-mail: bob.roberts{at}mcmail.vanderbilt.edu ).
| Abstract |
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2 testing.
-year period, 125 with ad libitum dietary management and 153 with intensive management of the gastrointestinal tract. Six patients (4.84%) aspirated before the institution of gastrointestinal tract management, whereas none (0.0%) aspirated after the change. This difference was significant (P = .01). Respiratory mortality was eliminated in the group with gastrointestinal tract management (P = .04). | Introduction |
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Pneumonia and aspiration are the two most dangerous causes of primary respiratory failure in patients undergoing lung resection. We believe that pneumonia develops in patients with poor pain control and weak cough, whereas aspiration occurs in patients with impaired or delayed gastrointestinal tract transit. Epidural catheters clearly help treat pain but may contribute to ileus. Further, we believe that recovery from aspiration after lung resection is a long, tedious process and less generally successful than recovery from pneumonia.
Either primary or secondary failure can lead to adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Although the survival after the development of ARDS has been reported to be as low as 50%, anecdotal reports suggest that the survival after the development of ARDS in the setting of lung resection is less. Thus prevention of the complication is paramount.
In response to two episodes of aspiration, the primary surgeon in this study (J.R.R.) changed his management policy from an ad libitum dietary advancement to one of routine gastric drainage perioperatively and dietary control in hopes of decreasing the incidence of aspiration.
| Methods |
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After two episodes of apparent aspiration in 1 week, gastrointestinal tract management was altered to diminish the chance of aspiration. Nasogastric tubes were placed intraoperatively and removed in the recovery room if less than 300 mL of liquid was obtained during the operation. Dietary management was nothing by mouth the day of the operation, clear liquids the first postoperative day, and regular diets the second postoperative day. Nasogastric tubes were replaced after any episode of vomiting, and performance of daily abdominal examinations to identify ileus was stressed to the residency and nursing staff. Fifty-four patients (36%) had nasogastric tubes in place overnight. Fourteen patients (9%) required replacement of nasogastric tubes because of abdominal distention or vomiting. If ileus was identified, a nothing by mouth order was given and patients were followed up.
Data analyzed included age, sex, pulmonary function test results, types of procedures, mortality, respiratory mortality, morbidity, life-threatening complications, tracheostomy, and reintubation. Patients were considered to have aspirated if diffuse infiltrates developed or culture of the sputa grew multiple organisms. Patients were considered to have pneumonia if they had infiltrates in one or two adjoining lobes and culture of the sputa grew a single dominant organism. Mortality was defined as hospital mortality, regardless of whether this occurred before or after 30 days. Life-threatening complications were defined as those that prompted intubation, cardioversion, or emergency operation or caused sepsis. Patients underwent a variety of procedures, including lobectomies, pneumonectomies, decortications, and complicated lobectomies.
The Student t test was used to assess differences in means, and the Fisher exact test was used to assess differences in proportions. This was a comparison study of sequential groups of patients. Because the event being studied is an extremely low-frequency event, the usual adjustments for nonrandomized trials that attempt to adjust for selection factors were powerless in this low-frequency setting.
| Results |
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| Discussion |
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Kohman and colleagues
3 analyzed 37 different factors that might affect the morbidity and mortality of lung resections and determined that preoperative factors only predict 28% of the risk in patients undergoing lung resection. They concluded that 72% of the complications must be attributed to factors not considered or to random factors. Our data indicate that issues of surgical management, specifically aspiration, might account for a portion of, or can decrease the impact of, these random factors.
Table V lists the largest series that report perioperative mortality after lobectomy and pneumonectomy. Mortality rates for lobectomy range from 0.47% in the Brigham series
8 to as high as 4.03%. The mortality rate for pneumonectomies ranges from 6.2% to 11.7%. Nesbitt and associates
10 recently reported an 8% perioperative mortality rate for all pneumonectomies done at the MD Anderson Cancer Center. These data all demonstrate that lung resection, whether by lobectomy or pneumonectomy, remains much more dangerous than a first-time cardiac bypass.
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Our data indicate that the chance of aspiration and the frequency of respiratory mortality can be decreased with gastrointestinal tract management that includes use of nasogastric tubes, dietary management, and frequent abdominal examinations. These are all techniques common to general surgical practice, and techniques that we apply routinely now to general thoracic surgical practice. Certainly many patients can be safely treated without such aggressive gastrointestinal tract management, as the mortality risk in our patients before our change indicates. However, the cost of a single aspiration, both in dollar terms and in mortality terms, is so high that significant measures to prevent it are justified.
| Appendix: Discussion |
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Dr Roberts. I am not entirely sure now what the best timing is for the use of the nasogastric tube. Currently I put it in in the operating room and then take it out the night of the operation if the drainage has not been greater than 300 mL. As you know, a nasogastric tube will decrease the patients ability to cough, and it is certainly possible that the tube is contributing to pneumonia.
Dr Swanson. What size nasogastric tube were you using? Was it variable?
Dr Roberts. Variable, yes.
Dr Swanson. Do you think you would get the same benefit with a small tube but also potentially allow better clearance of secretions, or do you think function of the nasogastric tube would be a problem if it was too small?
Dr Roberts. That is a good suggestion. In some sense I think of the tube as a diagnostic maneuver rather than a therapeutic maneuver, at least initially, to find out if there are a lot of gastric contents. It may very well be that a small tube would be as useful as inserting the tube in the operating room and taking it out if there is not much drainage.
Dr Valerie W. Rusch (New York, NY). Can you tell us something about the type of epidural analgesia used? Were only narcotics used? Do your anesthesiologists use narcotics plus a local anesthetic? Is there a uniform policy in that regard?
Dr Roberts. We use a thoracic epidural that is a combination of narcotics and local anesthetic. We typically vary it a little bit after it is in place if we have trouble with hypotension and decrease the amount of local anesthetic. By and large, however, it is pretty standard.
Dr Rusch. That may have some impact on the severity or duration of the ileus. Also, how many patients were actively smoking when they were admitted for the operation?
Dr Roberts. I do not have any data on that.
Dr Rusch. That really could be a confounding factor with respect to the frequency of postoperative respiratory problems.
Dr Roberts. Yes, I think it especially has an impact concerning pneumonia. Whereas I do not do volume-reduction operations in patients who are actively smoking, I do do lung cancer operations in patients who are still smoking; however, I do not have data on that.
Dr Mark K. Ferguson (Chicago, Ill). You are postulating that the epidural anesthetic contributes to the ileus. Are you leaving the epidural in until the chest tubes are removed?
Dr Roberts. Variably. Typically we leave the epidural in about 4 to 5 days if there is still an air leak, and then we usually take it out.
Dr Ferguson. I am curious as to how you think the nasogastric tube contributes if it is only left in overnight.
Dr Roberts. Overnight is the standard amount of time. If there is greater than 300 mL of fluid, then it is left in place. Several patients had them in for 4 or 5 days before the diet was advanced. In some sense, as I said, this is a diagnostic maneuver to determine whether the patients are having ileus in response to the operation and the epidural. If there is a lot of drainage at the end of the first day, then the tube stays in.
Dr Wickii T. Vigneswaran (Chicago, Ill). Can you comment about fluid management perioperatively? Did you change your management in any way? Did you actively use a vasoconstrictor because of the use of the epidural, which may have contributed to the bowel ischemia in one of the patients?
Dr Roberts. The one episode of bowel ischemia occurred on postoperative day 5 in an 80-year-old patient we were getting ready to send home, and I think his epidural had been out for a couple of days. I do not give patients any unneeded fluid. We do use dopamine and low-dose phenylephrine hydrochloride (Neo-Synephrine) for the immediate perioperative period, but the phenylephrine hydrochloride is always discontinued before they leave the recovery room later that day.
Dr Ferguson. Given some of the issues that have been raised and the potential importance of this, do you think a randomized trial is indicated, or are you sufficiently convinced?
Dr Roberts. At this point I am pretty convinced of the importance of it, and I have not considered whether a randomized trial would be appropriate. I have considered, from the standpoint of extending the data, doing a study to evaluate how bowel function is affected by epidurals, because when I talk to my anesthesia colleagues about whether there is a chance that patients really get an ileus from an epidural, they all say that that is not possible. For me, at least, this has been fairly convincing, and for the time being I have not considered a randomized trial.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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| References |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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A. Terzi, L. Luzzi, A. Campione, and A. Gorla Postoperative Pneumonia After Major Pulmonary Resections: The Importance of Gastrointestinal Tract Management Ann. Thorac. Surg., September 1, 2008; 86(3): 1059 - 1060. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. L. Partik, M. Scharitzer, G. Schueller, M. Voracek, W. Schima, E. Schober, M. R. Mueller, A. N. Leung, D.-M. Denk, and P. Pokieser Videofluoroscopy of Swallowing Abnormalities in 22 Symptomatic Patients After Cardiovascular Surgery Am. J. Roentgenol., April 1, 2003; 180(4): 987 - 992. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. H. DeLegge Aspiration Pneumonia: Incidence, Mortality, and At-Risk Populations JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr, November 1, 2002; 26(6_suppl): S19 - S25. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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N. A. Metheny Risk Factors for Aspiration JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr, November 1, 2002; 26(6_suppl): S26 - S33. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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