Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2758931 Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveReview the findings and use of rescue echocardiography performed by the Division of Perioperative Echocardiography and its impact on patient management.DesignRetrospective observational study.SettingSingle institution, tertiary care hospital.ParticipantsThree hundred sixty-four consecutive rescue echocardiograms in the perioperative setting.InterventionsRescue transesophageal or rescue transthoracic echocardiography.Measurements and Main ResultsOf a total of 1,675 perioperative echocardiograms performed in a 28-month period, 364 (21.8%) were rescue studies. Of these, 95.9% were transesophageal and 4.1% were transthoracic. Location at time of rescue echocardiography was intraoperative (55.5%), postoperative (44.2%), and preoperative (0.3%). No single diagnosis predominated the intraoperative or postoperative environment, and the frequency of common etiologies did not allow for assumption. There was a change in management for 214 patients (59%) as the result of findings. The methods used in performing rescue echocardiography at the authors’ institution are reported.ConclusionsThe heterogeneity of diagnoses and the frequency with which rescue echocardiography changed management further supports the growing body of evidence that the hemodynamically unstable perioperative patient benefits from its use.

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