Protective continuous ventilation strategy during cardiopulmonary bypass in children
undergoing surgery for congenital heart disease: a prospective study
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to evaluate if a 'protective' (low-tidal/low-frequency)
ventilation strategy can shorten the postoperative ventilation time and minimize acute
lung injury in children with congenital heart disease (CHD) undergoing repair with
cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB).METHODS: This is a single-centre prospective, interventional
study, including children with CHD under the age of 5 years, undergoing open-heart
surgery with a CPB >60 min, in hypothermia, haemodynamically stable, and without evident
genetic abnormalities. Assist-control ventilation (tidal volume of 4 ml/kg, 10 breaths/min,
positive end-expiratory pressure 5 cmH(2)O and FiO(2) 0.21) was applied in a cohort
of patients during CPB. We compared clinical outcomes and in fully ventilated versus
non-ventilated (control) patients. Propensity score was used to weigh ventilated and
control groups to correct for the effect of other confounding clinical variables.
Clinical and ventilation parameters and lung inflammatory biomarkers in tracheal aspirates
were measured. The primary outcome was the postoperative intubation time of more or
less than 48 h.RESULTS: We included 140 children (53 ventilated, 87 non-ventilated)
with different CHD. There were no deaths or adverse events in ventilated patients.
Using a weighted generalized linear model, we found no sufficient evidence for an
effect of intraoperative ventilation on postoperative intubation time [estimate 0.13
(95% confidence interval, -0.08; 0.35), P = 0.22].CONCLUSIONS: Continuous low-tidal/low-frequency
mechanical ventilation during CPB is safe and harmless. However, no significant advantages
were found when compared to non-ventilated patients in terms of postoperative ventilation
time.