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Perioperative Measurements of Diastolic Function in Cardiac Surgery

University College London (UCL) logo

University College London (UCL)

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Diastolic Dysfunction

Treatments

Procedure: Cardiac Surgery and enoximone

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02285309
UCLondon

Details and patient eligibility

About

This observational clinical trial will investigate the following perioperative indices relating to cardiac surgery:

  1. The significance of measurements involving left heart relaxation (LV diastolic function) and its relation to outcome measures.
  2. The significance of measurements involving right heart relaxation function and itrs relation to outcome measures.
  3. The influence of drugs such as enoximone on these outcome measures.

Full description

Over the past two decades, perioperative TOE has become routine part of monitoring in the setting of cardiac surgery. In many centres around the world nearly 100% of pateints undergoing cardiac surgery are monitored using this modality. There are several studies and observational reviews suggesting intraoperative TOE can change management and thus indirectly influence outcome in patients undergoing valve, aortic or bypass graft surgery. Certainly in our centre at The Heart Hospital, it is routine practce to perform an intraoperative TOE in all patients undergoing cardiac surgery in order to guide surgical and anaesthetic management of the patient. Despite this use of TOE there is very little evidence of how TOE influences patient related outcomes, both morbidity and mortality.

Several advances have occurred over the years involving both better technology to image the heart with TOE along with the development of novel measurements of heart function. As technology has evolved, many modalities and measurement have not been validated in the setting of cardiac surgery. In our observational clincal trial we aim to investigate the following:

  1. The significance of measurements involving left heart relaxation (LV diastolic function) and its relation to outcome measures.
  2. The significance of measurements involving the right heart relaxation function and itrs relation to outcome measures.
  3. The influence of drugs such as enoximone on these outcome measures.

While many of these measurements have been validated in the care of medical patients, they have not been examined in the surgical setting. In addition, its ability to predict outcome has never been tested. We believe this study will help us answer these important questions.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Systolic dysfunction (EF <50%) or diastolic dysfunction grade 1-3 as determined through preoperative TTE or intraoperative TOE
  • Able to give informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Contraindication to transoesphageal echocardiography (such as previous oesophagectomy)

Trial design

100 participants in 1 patient group

Cardiac surgery
Treatment:
Procedure: Cardiac Surgery and enoximone

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Bonnie Kyle

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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