Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) as an intraoperative monitoring modality and to assess its safety, reliability, and overall utility in real-time use during cardiac surgery.
DESIGN
Prospective, observational cohort study performed from January 1993 to June 1997.
SETTING
Operating room of a tertiary care hospital for cardiology and cardiovascular surgery.
PARTICIPANTS
Five thousand and sixteen adult patients with acquired heart disease, who underwent 1,356 valve procedures and 3,660 coronary artery bypass graftings (CABGs).
INTERVENTIONS
All patients were monitored with radial artery and pulmonary artery catheters, along with continuous TEE monitoring with a multiplane transducer.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS
Prebypass imaging yielded unsuspected findings that either helped or modified the surgical plan in 158 of 1,356 valve procedures (11.65%) and in 993 of 3,660 CABGs (27.13%). There were 3,217 TEE-guided hemodynamic interventions in 944 patients (25.79%) in the CABG group and 629 in 142 patients (10.47%) in the valve group. TEE was the sole guiding factor in initiating therapy in 23.53% of events, whereas it was supportive to other monitoring modalities in 76.46% of events. Postbypass TEE identified the need for graft revision in 29 patients (0.8%), intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP) requirement in 29 patients (0.8%), and inadequate valve repair in 28 patients (2.08%). For the entire series, 38.78% of patients benefited from prebypass and 39.16% from postbypass use of TEE. There were no complications attributable to the use of TEE in the entire series. There was 87% concordance between online interpretation by a trained anesthesiologist and offline analysis by a cardiologist.
CONCLUSION
Intraoperative TEE is useful in formulating the surgical plan, guiding various hemodynamic interventions, and assessing the immediate results of surgery. It is safe and the results are reliable in the hands of trained anesthesiologists.
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