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Excessive bleeding and transfusion in a prior cardiac surgery is associated with excessive bleeding and transfusion in the next surgery.

Nuttall GA, Henderson N, Quinn M, Blair C, Summers L, Williams BA, Oliver WC, Santrach PJ

Department of Anesthesilogy, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA. nuttall.gregory@mayo.edu

If there is a genetic predisposition to excessive bleeding, there should be an association in excessive blood loss between multiple cardiac surgeries. We retrospectively determined in 174 patients the association of excessive bleeding between 2 cardiac surgeries with cardiopulmonary bypass between January 19, 1990 and June 25, 2002. Excessive bleeding was defined by 2 criteria: (a) postoperating room chest tube blood loss over 24 h more than or equal to 750 mL (chest tube drainage [CTD] > or = 750) and (b) transfusion of any non-red blood cell (RBC) blood products. Logistic regression was used to estimate the association between excessive bleeding at the first and second cardiac procedures. The logistic regression models for CTD > or = 750 in the second surgery determined that CTD > or = 750 in the first surgery compared to CTD < 750 had an unadjusted odds ratio of 2.18 (P = 0.03) and an odds ratio of 2.42 (P = 0.03) when adjusted for age, sex, body surface area, preoperative anticoagulant use, cardiopulmonary bypass duration, and procedure type at second surgery. The logistic regression model for any non-RBC use in the second surgery determined that any non-RBC use in the first surgery compared with no non-RBC use had an unadjusted odds ratio of 2.32 (P = 0.02) and an odds ratio of 2.55 (P = 0.02) when adjusted for age, sex, body surface area, preoperative anticoagulant use, cardiopulmonary bypass duration, and procedure type at second surgery. We conclude that a history of excessive bleeding during the first operation is associated with more than two times increased risk for excessive bleeding in the second surgery.

Published 22 March 2006 in Anesth Analg, 102(4): 1012-7.
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