Abstract

Near infrared spectroscopy is routinely used in the noninvasive monitoring of cerebral and somatic regional oxygen saturation (rSO2) in pediatric patients following surgery for congenital heart disease. We sought to evaluate the association of a bedside rSO2 thought algorithm with clinical outcomes in a cohort of pediatric patients following cardiac surgery. This was a single-center retrospective cohort study of patients admitted following cardiac surgery over a 42-month period. The intervention was the implementation of an rSO2 thought algorithm, the primary goal of which was to supply bedside providers with a thought aide to help identify, and guide response to, changes in rSO2 in post-operative cardiac surgical patients. Surgical cases were stratified into two 18-month periods of observation, pre- and post-intervention allowing for a 6-month washout period during implementation of the thought algorithm. Clinical outcomes were compared between pre- and post-intervention periods. There were 434 surgical cases during the period of study. We observed a 27% relative risk reduction in our standardized mortality rate (0.61 to 0.48, p = 0.01) between the pre- and post-intervention periods. We did not observe differences in other post-operative clinical outcomes such as ventilator free days or post-operative ICU length of stay. Providing frontline clinical staff with education and tools, such as a bedside rSO2 thought algorithm, may aide in the earlier detection of imbalance between oxygen delivery and consumption and may contribute to improved patient outcomes.

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