Abstract

Purpose: (1) Study the change in SO2 value in fluid therapy in patients after cardiac surgery; (2) Evaluate the role of SO2 monitoring in serving as an indicator of fluid responsiveness in patients after cardiac surgery. Methods: This was a prospective study reported earlier on critically ill patients with clinical hypovolemia after cardiac surgery. Fluid therapy was guided by changes in pulmonary artery wedge pressure or central venous pressure. Fluid responsiveness was defined as ≥15% increase in cardiac index. Hemodynamics, including left ventricular ejection fraction, cardiac index, and oxygen delivery were measured when SO2 blood samples taken. Results: There was 110 patients receiving fluid therapy in postoperative period. The SO2 increased in 104 patients responding to fluid loading (≥15% in cardiac index in n=107) versus those not responding (n=6). The increase in ejection fraction, cardiac index and oxygen delivery was also greater in responders (p=0.005). The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for fluid responsiveness of changes in SO2 was 0.78 (p=0.05), with an optimal cutoff of 2%. The value of SO2 increased to reflect cardiac index increases with fluid loading was in 66.7% of patients. Conclusions: An increase in SO2 ≥ 2% can thus be used as an indicator of fluid responsiveness in clinically hypovolemic patients after cardiac surgery, particularly in those with systolic cardiac dysfunction. Fluid responsiveness concurs with increased tissue oxygen delivery. Key words: mixed venous oxygen saturation (SO2); oxygen delivery (DO2); oxygen consumption (VO2); central venous pressure (CVP), pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PAWP); cardiac index (CI); hypovolemia; fluid therapy.

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