All major surgeries of patients performed under general anesthesia, require monitoring of vital functions performed by the cardiovascular and the respiratory systems. It is very important to monitor the vital signs such as ECG, heart rate, blood pressure, respiration and oxygen saturation of the blood.
During the perioperative period of cardiovascular surgeries, an
imbalance between oxygen supply and demand may lead to postoperative cognitive
decline that may affect about 20% of the operated patients. In order to
minimize the development of brain damage, few companies have developed
monitoring devices that could provide real-time information regarding brain
oxygenation, brain electrical activities or cerebral blood flow. Nevertheless,
this approach is not the appropriate way to detect an early warning signal that
may serve as an indicator of brain-negative oxygen balance. The alternative
approach is to monitor the tissue oxygen balance of one of the less vital
organs in the body that may serve as an early warning signal of deterioration
of body oxygen balance. In this review, the use of a multiparametric monitoring
device (CritiView) connected to the patient’s urethral wall via a 3-way Foley
catheter that measures in real-time 4 parameters representing tissue oxygen
balance. Mitochondrial NADH is measured by surface fluorometry/reflectometry.
In addition, tissue microcirculatory blood flow, tissue reflectance and
hemoglobin oxygenation are measured as well. The measured four (4) parameters
could be integrated together with systemic hemodynamic parameters to provide in
real time a new Tissue Metabolic Score (TMS). The device was tested both in vitro and in vivo in a small animal model and in preliminary clinical trials
in patients undergoing vascular or open heart surgery. In patients, the
monitoring started immediately after the insertion of a 3-way Foley catheter (urine
collection) to the patient and was stopped when the patient was discharged from
the operation room. The results show that monitoring the Urethral wall oxygen
balance provides information in correlation to the surgical procedure
performed. The CritiView results may serve as early warning signals to the
deterioration of the body or the end point of resuscitations during and after
cardiovascular surgeries.
Author
(s) Details
Avraham Mayevsky
The Mina & Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan University,
Ramat-Gan 5290092, Israel.
Michael Tolmasov
The Mina & Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan
University, Ramat-Gan 5290092, Israel.
Mira Mandelbaum
The Mina & Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan
University, Ramat-Gan 5290092, Israel.
Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/msti/v4/4146
No comments:
Post a Comment