Preview

International Journal of Veterinary Medicine

Advanced search

The effect of chronic heart failure on the rick of intraoperative hypoxia

https://doi.org/10.52419/issn2072-2419.2022.1.234

Abstract

Any surgical intervention is a surgical trauma, which severity depends on the type and degree of surgical intervention. Several changes occur in the patient's body in response to surgical trauma, which degree depends on the functional state of systems and organs in the preoperative period. In our study, we investigated how chronic heart failure (CHF) affects the development of such a factor of surgical trauma as hypoxia. The aim of our study is to determine whether CHF is a risk factor for the development of intraoperative hypoxia in animals during surgical interventions lasting up to 60 minutes. Lactate level was chosen as a marker of hypoxia. The study was conducted at the facilities of St. Petersburg State University of Veterinary Medicine and VEGA veterinary clinic chain in the city of St. Petersburg, Russia. The study was carried out on 20 dogs with myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD). The animals were allocated into three groups depending on the stage of the disease: seven dogs with MMVD in stage B1 — in group 1, eight dogs with MMVD in stage B2 — in group 2, five dogs with MMVD in stage C — in group 3. The lactate level in whole venous blood was measured in all animals before the operation (at rest and under load), during the operation and two hours after the operation. The mean lactate increase under load in group 2 dogs was 0.08 mmol/L, and in group 3 dogs — 0.20 mmol/L. According to the results of statistical analysis, the increase in lactate under load in dogs with MMVD in stage C statistically significantly exceeds the increase in the level of lactate under load in animals with MMVD in stage B2. Thus, MMVD in stage C can be considered a risk factor for the development of intraoperative hypoxia.

About the Authors

A. A. Filipenkova
Saint-Petersburg State University of Veterinary Medicine
Russian Federation

 post-graduate student of the Department of General and Private Surgery 



A. V. Nazarova
Saint-Petersburg State University of Veterinary Medicine
Russian Federation

assistant of the Department of Obstetrics and Operative surgery



References

1. Алексеева, Т.М. Постгипоксическая энцефалопатия у пациентов после кардиохирургических вмешательств: этиологические, патогенетические и клинические аспекты / Т.М. Алексеева, О.А. Портик, М.П. Топузова // Неврология, нейропсихиатрия, психосоматика. — 2018. — Том 10, № 3. — С. 121–128.

2. Грачёв, В.И. Влияние гипоксии при бронхиальной астме, заболеваниях печени и ожоговой болезни, а также при острой лучевой болезни / В.И. Грачёв, И.О. Маринкин, И.Т. Севрюков // Евразийский союз ученых. — 2018. — № 7-2(52). — С. 26–39.

3. Набиев, М.Х. Комплексная оценка и коррекция состояние свёртывающей системы крови у больных с синдромом диабетической стопы / М.Х. Набиев, Д.А. Абдуллоев, Б.М. Хафизов // Здравоохранение Таджикистана. — 2017. —№ 3 (334). — С. 55–61.

4. ACVIM consensus guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of myxomatous mitral valve disease in dogs / Keene BW, Atkins CE, Bonagura JD, Fox PR, Häggström J, Fuentes VL, Oyama MA, Rush JE, Stepien R, Uechi M. // J Vet Intern Med. 2019 May;33(3):1127-1140.

5. Kehlet, H. Anaesthesia, surgery, and challenges in postoperative recovery / H. Kehlet, J. B. Dahl // Lancet. 2003 Dec 6;362 (9399):1921-8.

6. Stevenson, С.K. Evaluation of the Accutrend for lactate measurement in dogs / Connie K. Stevenson, Beverly A. Kidney, Tanya Duke, Elisabeth C. R. Snead, Marion L. Jackson // Veterinary Clinical Pathology. — 2007. — Vol. 36, No. 3. — P. 261–266.


Review

For citations:


Filipenkova A.A., Nazarova A.V. The effect of chronic heart failure on the rick of intraoperative hypoxia. International Journal of Veterinary Medicine. 2022;(1):234-238. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.52419/issn2072-2419.2022.1.234

Views: 259


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2072-2419 (Print)