Ischemic Time as a Predictor of Physical Recovery in the First Months after Heart Transplantation
Author(s) -
Francisco Buendía Fuentes,
Luis AlmenarBonet,
Luis MartínezDolz,
Ignacio SánchezLázaro,
María Rodríguez Serrano,
Diana Domingo,
María José Sancho-Tello de Carranza,
Antonio SalvadorSanz
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
isrn cardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-5599
pISSN - 2090-5580
DOI - 10.5402/2012/907102
Subject(s) - medicine , inotrope , univariate analysis , perioperative , transplantation , metabolic equivalent , treadmill , heart transplantation , cardiology , etiology , prospective cohort study , physical therapy , surgery , multivariate analysis , physical activity
Functional results after heart transplantation range from modest to spectacular improvement. Little is known about factors to predict functional result. This study aimed to identify these factors. We present a prospective study including all consecutive transplant recipients ( n = 55) in a two-year period whose survival was greater than two months. Perioperative, donor, and recipient issues were systematically analyzed. Exercise capacity was assessed by symptom-limited treadmill exercise testing two months after transplantation. Exercise capacity was classified as satisfactory or poor depending on achieving or not 4.5 METs (metabolic equivalents), respectively. Thirty-three patients (60%) showed a good exercise capacity (>4.5 METs), whereas the remaining twenty-two patients (40%) were unable to exceed this threshold. The variables which correlated with exercise capacity in univariate analysis were recipient age, inotropic treatment, ischemic time, ventricular assist device, etiology, urgent transplant, and INTERMACS score. Among them only recipient age and ischemic time were proved to be correlated with exercise capacity in the multiple regression analysis. Thus, younger patients and those who had received an organ with shorter ischemic time showed greater exercise capacity after transplant. These findings strengthen the trend toward reducing ischemic time as much as possible to improve both survival and clinical recovery.
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