Abstract

BackgroundOrthopedic patients with ischemic heart disease are at risk for postoperative cardiac complications.Questions/PurposesUsing information from two medical information retrieval systems which insured the capture of all events for the period of study, our goals were to determine the incidence of myocardial injury in at-risk patients after orthopedic surgery and to delineate the type and incidence of cardiac complications in this population.MethodsFor one year, at an orthopedic hospital, we identified all postoperative patients with a measured cTnI level using an electronic ordering system. Preoperative cardiac risk factors and postoperative cardiac complications were identified in patients undergoing a total hip arthroplasty (THA), total knee arthroplasty (TKA), and posterior spinal fusion (PSF). A postoperative myocardial infarction was defined by a cTnI > 0.1 ng/mL, ECG changes, new echocardiographic regional wall motion abnormalities, and evaluation by a cardiologist. Categorical variables were compared among groups with a Fisher’s exact or Chi-square test. Continuous variables were compared among groups with ANOVA or the Kruskal-Wallis test. The associations of cardiac risk factors with myocardial injury are expressed as odds ratios from logistic regression models.ResultsDuring a one-year period, from 10,627 inpatient orthopedic procedures, 805 patients were identified as at risk for postoperative myocardial ischemia. A total of 20.6% (166/805) of these patients had elevated serum cTnI levels (cTnI > 0.02 ng/mL), and there were ten documented postoperative MIs (10/805; 1.2%). For the at-risk TKA, THA, or PSF patients, 19% (102/532) had elevated cTnI levels and 31% (32/102) had postoperative cardiac complications, including arrhythmias (56%), congestive heart failure (2%), and MI (1%). Adjusting for sex, age, BMI, cardiac risk factors, and medications (statins and β-blockers), PSF patients had 3.9 times the risk of myocardial injury (p = 0.003) compared to TKA patients and 4.2 times that of THA patients.ConclusionsThe incidence of postoperative myocardial ischemia after major orthopedic surgery in patients with cardiac risk factors is high (8.7%), but the incidence of documented myocardial infarctions and serious cardiac complications remains low (1.2–2%). Patients with higher postoperative cTnI releases were more likely to have cardiac complications, and some procedures (spinal fusions) placed the patients at a higher risk.

Highlights

  • As our population ages, there will be a demand for a continued active lifestyle

  • Patients with anginal symptoms of myocardial ischemia during their postoperative period were entered into the rule-out-PMI protocol (ROMI) protocol

  • Adjusting for sex, age, BMI, multiple cardiac risk factors, and medications, posterior spinal fusion (PSF) patients had 3.9 times the odds of postoperative myocardial injury compared to total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and 4.2 times the odds compared to total hip arthroplasty (THA) patients (p = 0.003)

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Summary

Introduction

There will be a demand for a continued active lifestyle. Concomitantly, there will be an increase in demand for orthopedic surgery. Orthopedic surgery is associated with a number of conditions which impose significant physiologic stresses [6] These include significant blood loss with concomitant fluid shifts, promotion of an inflammatory response due to the embolization of fat and other substances from the bone, and significant postoperative. Questions/Purposes: Using information from two medical information retrieval systems which insured the capture of all events for the period of study, our goals were to determine the incidence of myocardial injury in at-risk patients after orthopedic surgery and to delineate the type and incidence of cardiac complications in this population. Preoperative cardiac risk factors and postoperative cardiac complications were identified in patients undergoing a total hip arthroplasty (THA), total knee arthroplasty (TKA), and posterior spinal fusion (PSF).

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