Abstract

The postoperative courses of 39 patients with severe lung disease (31 with obstructive disease and 8 restrictive) who underwent a cardiac operation were retrospectively reviewed. The stay in the intensive care unit of the study group was 7.9 ± 10.3 days (mean ± standard deviation) compared with 2.4 ± 3.9 days for the control group (100 patients with less impaired pulmonary function) ( p < 0.001). The study group also had a greater number of valve replacements than did the control group ( p < 0.01). Patients with obstructive disease had more respiratory complications than did patients with restrictive disease ( p < 0.05). There were 21 cases of atelectasis. Effusions were noted in 11 patients. Ten patients had bronchospasm. Bronchial secretions were a major problem in 6 patients. Pneumonia developed in 4 patients, and pneumothorax occurred in 3 others. The two in-hospital deaths were not directly related to pulmonary complications. Our findings indicate that (1) patients with severe lung impairment generally do well after a cardiac operation but have more postoperative pulmonary complications than patients with less impairment; (2) patients with restrictive pulmonary disease appear to fare better than those with obstructive disease; (3) pulmonary function tests can alert the clinician to the possible risk of postoperative complications, but they cannot, by themselves, be used to exclude patients from operation; and (4) patients with severe pulmonary impairment facing valve replacement are at greater risk of pulmonary complications than patients having other types of cardiac surgical intervention.

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