Journal article

A National Survey: Current Clinical Practice in Pediatric Anesthesia for Congenital Heart Surgery


Authors listBaehner, Torsten; Kiefer, Nicholas; Ghamari, Shahab; Graeff, Ingo; Huett, Christopher; Pflugradt, Stefan; Sendzik, Bjoern; Heinze, Ingo; Mueller, Matthias; Schindler, Ehrenfried; Duerr, Georg Daniel; Ellerkmann, Richard; Velten, Markus

Publication year2020

Pages257-264

JournalWorld Journal for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Surgery

Volume number11

Issue number3

ISSN2150-1351

eISSN2150-0136

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1177/2150135120902122

PublisherSAGE Publications


Abstract

Background:

Providing anesthesia for pediatric patients undergoing congenital cardiac surgery is complex and requires profound knowledge and clinical experience. Prospective studies on best anesthetic management are missing, partially due to different standards. The aim of the present study was to survey the current standard practice in anesthetic management in pediatric cardiac surgical centers in Germany.

Methods:

All 78 cardiac surgical centers in Germany were reviewed for a congenital cardiac surgery program. Centers with an active program for congenital cardiac surgery were interviewed to participate in the present online questionnaire to assess their current anesthetic practice.

Results:

Twenty-seven German centers running an active program for congenital heart surgery were identified, covering more than 3,000 pediatric cardiac surgeries annually. Of these centers, 96.3% (26/27) participated in our survey. Standard induction agents were etomidate in 26.9% (7/26), propofol in 19.2% (5/26), a combination of benzodiazepines and ketamine in 19.2% (5/26), and barbiturates in 11.5% (3/26). General anesthesia was preferentially maintained using volatile agents, 61.5% (16/26), with sevoflurane being the most common volatile agent within this group, 81.2% (13/16). Intraoperative first-choice/first-line inotropic drug was epinephrine, 53.8% (14/26), followed by milrinone, 23.1% (6/26), and dobutamine 15.4% (4/26). Fast-track programs performing on-table extubation depending on the type of surgical procedure were established at 61.5% (16/26) of the centers.

Conclusion:

This study highlights the diversity of clinical standards in pediatric cardiac anesthesia for congenital cardiac surgery in Germany.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleBaehner, T., Kiefer, N., Ghamari, S., Graeff, I., Huett, C., Pflugradt, S., et al. (2020) A National Survey: Current Clinical Practice in Pediatric Anesthesia for Congenital Heart Surgery, World Journal for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Surgery, 11(3), pp. 257-264. https://doi.org/10.1177/2150135120902122

APA Citation styleBaehner, T., Kiefer, N., Ghamari, S., Graeff, I., Huett, C., Pflugradt, S., Sendzik, B., Heinze, I., Mueller, M., Schindler, E., Duerr, G., Ellerkmann, R., & Velten, M. (2020). A National Survey: Current Clinical Practice in Pediatric Anesthesia for Congenital Heart Surgery. World Journal for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Surgery. 11(3), 257-264. https://doi.org/10.1177/2150135120902122



Keywords


CARDIAC-SURGERYCARDIOPULMONARY BYPASScongenital heart diseasecongenital heart surgeryEXTUBATIONFALLOTpediatric cardiac anesthesiaPROPOFOL INFUSION SYNDROMETETRALOGYVENTILATION

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:23