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A large Venous-Arterial PCO2Is Associated with Poor Outcomes in Surgical Patients
Author(s) -
João Manoel Silva,
Amanda Maria Ribas Rosa de Oliveira,
Juliano Lopes Segura,
Marcel Henrique Ribeiro,
Carolicevicius Sposito,
Diogo Oliveira Toledo,
Ederlon Rezende,
Luíz Marcelo Sá Malbouisson
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
anesthesiology research and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.3
H-Index - 24
eISSN - 1687-6970
pISSN - 1687-6962
DOI - 10.1155/2011/759792
Subject(s) - medicine , algorithm , receiver operating characteristic , mathematics
Background . This study evaluated whether large venous-arterial CO 2 gap (PCO 2 gap) preoperatively is associated to poor outcome. Method . Prospective study which included adult high-risk surgical patients. The patients were pooled into two groups: wide [P(v-a)CO 2 ] versus narrow [P(v-a)CO 2 ]. In order to determine the best value to discriminate hospital mortality, it was applied a ROC (receiver operating characteristic) curve for the [P(v-a)CO 2 ] values collected preoperatively, and the most accurate value was chosen as cut-off to define the groups. Results . The study included 66 patients. The [P(v-a)CO 2 ] value preoperatively that best discriminated hospital mortality was 5.0 mmHg, area = 0.73. Preoperative patients with [P(v-a)CO 2 ] more than 5.0 mmHg presented a higher hospital mortality (36.4% versus 4.5%  P = 0.004), higher prevalence of circulatory shock (56.8% versus 22.7%  P = 0.01) and acute renal failure postoperatively (27.3% versus 4.5%  P = 0.02), and longer hospital length of stays 20.0 (14.0–30.0) versus 13.5 (9.0–25.0) days P = 0.01. Conclusions . The PCO 2 gap values more than 5.0 mmHg preoperatively were associated with worse postoperatively outcome.

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