Association of Postoperative Serum Lactate Levels with Acute Kidney Injury in Mexican Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery

Author:

Flores-Salinas Héctor-Enrique1,Zambada-Gamboa Anahí de Jesús1ORCID,Garcia-Garduño Texali-Candelaria2ORCID,Rodríguez-Zavala Guillermo1,Valle Yeminia2ORCID,Chávez-Herrera Juan-Carlos1,Martinez-Gutierrez Porfirio-Eduardo1,Godinez-Flores Arturo1,Jiménez-Limón Salvador1,Padilla-Gutiérrez Jorge-Ramón2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Especialidad en Cardiología, Unidad Médica de Alta Especialidad, Centro Médico Nacional de Occidente (CMNO), Departamento de Cardiología, Instituto Mexicano Del Seguro Social (IMSS), Guadalajara 44340, Mexico

2. Instituto de Investigación en Ciencias Biomédicas (IICB), Centro Universitario de Ciencias de La Salud (CUCS), Universidad de Guadalajara (UDG), Guadalajara 44340, Mexico

Abstract

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a highly prevalent and a critical complication of cardiac surgery (CS). Serum lactate (sLac) levels have consistently shown an association with morbimortality after CS. We performed a cross-sectional study including 264 adult patients that had a cardiac surgery between January and December 2020. Logistic regression analysis was performed to determine factors associated with AKI development. We measured the postoperative levels of sLac for all participants immediately after CS (T0) and at 4 h (T4) after the surgical intervention. A linear regression model was used to identify the factors influencing both sLac metrics. We identified four risk predictors of AKI; one was preoperative (atrial fibrillation), one intraoperative (cardiopulmonary bypass time), and two were postoperative (length of hospital stay and postoperative sLac). T0 and T4 sLac levels were higher among CS-AKI patients than in Non-CS-AKI patients. Postoperative sLac levels were significant independent predictors of CSA-AKI, and sLac levels are influenced by length of hospital stay, the number of transfused packed red blood cells, and the use of furosemide in CS-AKI patients. These findings may facilitate the earlier identification of patients susceptible to AKI after CS.

Funder

Instituto Mexicano Del Seguro Social

Publisher

MDPI AG

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