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Childhood infections and common carotid intima media thickness in adolescence
- A. C. Prins-van Ginkel, P. C. J. Bruijning-Verhagen, A. H. Wijga, M. L. Bots, U. Gehring, W. van der Hoek, G. H. Koppelman, L. van Rossem, C. S. P. M. Uiterwaal, H. A. Smit, M. A. B. van der Sande
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- Journal:
- Epidemiology & Infection / Volume 147 / 2019
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 November 2018, e37
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Atherosclerotic changes can be measured as changes in common carotid intima media thickness (CIMT). It is hypothesised that repeated infection-associated inflammatory responses in childhood contribute to the atherosclerotic process. We set out to determine whether the frequency of infectious diseases in childhood is associated with CIMT in adolescence. The study is part of the Prevention and Incidence of Asthma and Mite Allergy (PIAMA) population-based birth cohort. At age 16 years, common CIMT was measured. We collected general practitioner (GP) diagnosed infections and prescribed antibiotics. Parent-reported infections were retrieved from annual questionnaires. Linear regression analysis assessed the association between number of infections during the first 4 years of life and common CIMT. Common CIMT measurement, GP and questionnaire data were available for 221 participants. No association was observed between the infection measures and CIMT. In a subgroup analysis, significant positive associations with CIMT were observed in participants with low parental education for 2–3 or ⩾7 GP diagnosed infections (+26.4 µm, 95% CI 0.4–52.4 and +26.8 µm, 95% CI 3.6–49.9, respectively) and ⩾3 antibiotic prescriptions (+35.5 µm, 95%CI 15.8–55.3). Overall, early childhood infections were not associated with common CIMT in adolescence. However, a higher number of childhood infections might contribute to the inflammatory process of atherosclerosis in subgroups with low education, this needs to be confirmed in future studies.
Postoperative course in the cardiac intensive care unit following the first stage of Norwood reconstruction
- Gil Wernovsky, Marijn Kuijpers, Maaike C. Van Rossem, Bradley S. Marino, Chitra Ravishankar, Troy Dominguez, Rodolfo I. Godinez, Kathryn M. Dodds, Richard F. Ittenbach, Susan C. Nicolson, Geoffrey L. Bird, J. William Gaynor, Thomas L. Spray, Sarah Tabbutt
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- Journal:
- Cardiology in the Young / Volume 17 / Issue 6 / December 2007
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 07 November 2007, pp. 652-665
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The medical records of all patients born between 1 September, 2000, and 31 August, 2002, and undergoing the first stage of Norwood reconstruction, were retrospectively reviewed for details of the perioperative course. We found 99 consecutive patients who met the criterions for inclusion. Hospital mortality for the entire cohort was 15.2%, but was 7.3%, with 4 of 55 dying, in the setting of a “standard” risk profile, as opposed to 25.0% for those with a “high” risk profile, 11 of 44 patients dying in this group. Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation was utilized in 7 patients, with 6 deaths. Median postoperative length of stay in the hospital was 14 days, with a range from 2 to 85 days, and stay in the cardiac intensive care unit was 11 days, with a range from 2 to 85 days. Delayed sternal closure was performed in 18.2%, with a median of 1 day until closure, with a range from zero to 5 days. Excluding isolated delayed sternal closure, and cannulation and decannulation for extracorporeal support, 24 patients underwent 33 cardiothoracic reoperations, including exploration for bleeding in 12, diaphragmatic plication in 4; shunt revision in 4, and other procedures in 13. The median duration of total mechanical ventilation was 4.0 days, with a range from 0.7 to 80.5 days. Excluding those who died, the median total duration of mechanical ventilation was 3.8 days, with a range from 0.9 to 46.3 days. Reintubation for cardiorespiratory failure or upper airway obstruction was performed in 31 patients. Postoperative electroencephalographic and/or clinical seizures occurred in 13 patients, with 7 discharged on anti-convulsant medications. Postoperative renal failure, defined as a level of creatinine greater than 1.5 mg/dl, was present in 13 patients. Eleven had significant thrombocytopenia, with fewer than 20,000 platelets per μl, and injury to the vocal cords was identified in eight patients. Risk factors for longer length of stay included lower Apgar scores, preoperative intubation, early reoperations, reintubation and sepsis, but not weight at birth, genetic syndromes, the specific surgeon, or the duration of surgery.
Although mortality rates after the first stage of reconstruction continue to fall, the course in the intensive care unit is remarkable for significant morbidity, especially involving the cardiac, pulmonary and central nervous systems. These patients utilize significant resources during the first hospitalization. Further studies are necessary to stratify the risks faced by patients with hypoplasia of the left heart in whom the first stage of Norwood reconstruction is planned, to determine methods to reduce perioperative morbidity, and to determine the long-term implications of short-term complications, such as diaphragmatic paresis, injury to the vocal cords, prolonged mechanical ventilation, and postoperative seizures.
Haemodynamic changes during modified ultrafiltration immediately following the first stage of the Norwood reconstruction
- J. William Gaynor, Marijn Kuypers, Maaike van Rossem, Gil Wernovsky, Bradley S. Marino, Sarah Tabbutt, Susan C. Nicolson, Thomas L. Spray
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- Journal:
- Cardiology in the Young / Volume 15 / Issue 1 / January 2005
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 14 April 2005, pp. 4-7
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Background: Modified ultrafiltration has been shown to reverse haemodilution and improve ventricular function following cardiopulmonary bypass. There has been concern, however, about the safety and efficacy of modified ultrafiltration after the first stage of Norwood reconstruction for palliation of neonates with hypoplasia of the left heart and its variants. Methods: We reviewed the intraoperative course of all patients undergoing the first stage of Norwood reconstruction between September 1, 2000, and August 31, 2002. Results: The first stage of reconstruction was performed in 99 neonates, 78 with classical hypoplasia of the left heart, and 21 with variants. Mean weight at surgery was 3.1 plus or minus 0.7 kilograms. Genetic syndromes, weight less than or equal to 2.5 kilograms, and/or major additional cardiac or non-cardiac anomalies, were present in 44 patients. We deemed these patients to constitute the group at high risk. A modified Blalock–Taussig shunt was utilized in 95 patients, and a conduit from the right ventricle to the pulmonary arteries in 4. Deep hypothermic circulatory arrest was used in all patients for a mean period of 45 minutes, plus or minus 15 minutes. Total support time on cardiopulmonary bypass plus deep hypothermic circulatory arrest was 100 minutes plus or minus 26 minutes. Modified ultrafiltration was performed in all patients. The mean duration of modified ultrafiltration was 10 plus or minus 2 minutes, and the total volume of filtrate removed was 104 plus or minus 29 millilitres per kilogram. There were no complications from modified ultrafiltration, and no patient required discontinuation of modified ultrafiltration for haemodynamic instability. During modified ultrafiltration, the haematocrit increased from 31 percent plus or minus 4 to 46 percent plus or minus 6. Heart rate decreased from 170 plus or minus 17 beats per minute to 158 plus or minus 16 beats per minute. Systolic blood pressure increased from 57 plus or minus 12 to 63 plus or minus 13 millimetres of mercury, and diastolic blood pressure from 30 plus or minus 8 to 35 plus or minus 7 millimetres of mercury. All these values are significant at a p value of less than 0.0001. Hospital morality in the patients at low risk was 3 of 55 (5.5 percent), but was 12 of 44 (27.3 percent) in the patients deemed to be at high-risk. Conclusions: Modified ultrafiltration is safe procedure following the first stage of Norwood reconstruction, with improvement in all haemodynamic parameters measured. Modified ultrafiltration is an additional incremental strategy, which may contribute to the overall improvement in outcome following surgical palliation of patients with hypoplasia of the left heart or its variants.