No Association of Early Postoperative Heart Rate With Outcomes After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting

Author:

Morita Yoshihisa1,Kumasawa Junji2,Miyamoto Yoshihisa3,Izawa Junichi4,Krishnamoorthy Vijay5,Raghunathan Karthik6,Bartz Raquel R.7,Thompson Annemarie8,Ohnuma Tetsu9

Affiliation:

1. Yoshihisa Morita is an assistant professor, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland.

2. Junji Kumasawa is an intensivist, Department of Critical Care Medicine, Sakai City Medical Center, Osaka, Japan.

3. Yoshihisa Miyamoto is a researcher, Division of Nephrology and Endocrinology, University of Tokyo, Japan.

4. Junichi Izawa is an intensivist, Department of Medicine, Okinawa Prefectural Yaeyama Hospital, Ishigaki, Okinawa, Japan.

5. Vijay Krishnamoorthy is an associate professor, Critical Care and Perioperative Population Health Research (CAPER) Unit, Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.

6. Karthik Raghunathan is an associate professor, CAPER Unit, Duke University Medical Center, and an anesthesiologist, Patient Safety Center of Inquiry, Durham VA Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.

7. Raquel R. Bartz is an associate professor, CAPER Unit, Duke University Medical Center.

8. Annemarie Thompson is a professor, CAPER Unit, Duke University Medical Center.

9. Tetsu Ohnuma is an assistant professor, CAPER Unit, Duke University Medical Center.

Abstract

Background Elevated perioperative heart rate potentially causes perioperative myocardial injury because of imbalance in oxygen supply and demand. However, large multicenter studies evaluating early postoperative heart rate and major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCEs) are lacking. Objective To assess the associations of 4 postoperative heart rate assessment methods with in-hospital MACCEs after elective coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Methods Using data from the eICU Collaborative Research Database in the United States from 2014 to 2015, the study evaluated postoperative heart rate measured during hospitalization within 24 hours after intensive care unit admission. Four heart rate assessment methods were evaluated: maximum heart rate, duration above heart rate 100/min, area above heart rate 100/min, and time-weighted average heart rate. The outcome was in-hospital MACCEs, defined as a composite of in-hospital death, myocardial infarction, angina, arrhythmia, heart failure, stroke, cardiac arrest, or repeat revascularization. Results Among 2585 patients, the crude rate of in-hospital MACCEs was 6.2%. In multivariable logistic regression analysis, the adjusted odds ratios (95% CI) for in-hospital MAC-CEs assessed by maximum heart rate in each heart rate category (beats per minute: >100-110, >110-120, >120-130, and >130) were 1.43 (0.95-2.15), 0.98 (0.56-1.64), 1.47 (0.76-2.69), and 1.71 (0.80-3.35), respectively. Similarly, none of the other 3 methods were associated with MACCEs. Conclusions More research is needed to assess the usefulness of heart rate measurement in patients after CABG.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care Nursing,General Medicine

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