Arama Sonuçları

Ana Sayfa
   
Pleksus Medline
Hakkımızda
İstatistikler
İndekslenen Dergiler
İletişim
Teşekkürler
Medline Servisleri
Gelişmiş Arama
Makale Arama
Dergi Arama
İlgili Kaynaklar
Yazar Kimdir ?
Makale Nasıl Yazılır?
Standartlar
İlgili Linkler
Ulusal Online Dergiler
PubMed
Ulaknet Ulusal Tıp Dizini
Kayıt olmak ister misiniz ?
 


   : Ücretsiz tam metin içeriği bulunan dergiler
   : Sadece elektronik yayınlanan dergiler

  1: Anadolu Kardiyoloji Dergisi 2008;8(1):22-26

  OBESITY AND OPEN-HEART SURGERY IN A DEVELOPING COUNTRY  

  GÜZEL DİŞCİGİL, ERDEM ALİ ÖZKISACIK, MUHARREM İSMAİL BADAK, TUĞRUL GÜNEŞ, BERENT DİŞCİGİL

From Departments of Family Medicine and Cardiovascular Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Adnan Menderes University, Aydın, Turkey

Objective: The aim of the present study was to assess obesity as a risk of adverse outcomes following cardiac surgery. Methods: The data of 324 consecutive patients who underwent elective procedures requiring cardiopulmonary bypass in a single cardiac center in South-Western Anatolia were retrospectively analyzed. There were 250 males and 74 females. Median age was 58.8 years (range 17 to 90 years). A body mass index (BMI)≥30 kg/m2 was defined as obesity. Adverse outcomes analyzed included in-hospital mortality, chest tube drainage, reopening, inotropic support, arrhythmias, deep sternal wound infection, superficial surgical site infection and hospital stay duration. Multiple logistic regression analysis was performed to assess the relationship of obesity with clinical outcomes after cardiac surgery. Covariates considered in the logistic model included age, gender, pulmonary disease, cerebrovascular disease, smoking, hypertension, and diabetes. Results: Fourteen percent of patients (47/324) were obese and this ratio is quite smaller than reported for industrialized countries. The results of multiple regression analysis demonstrated that obesity was a risk factor only for superficial sternal or harvesting site infection (odds ratio - 4.5, 95% CI-1.404-14.679, p=0.012). Conclusion: Obesity was associated with increased risk of superficial surgical wound infections following cardiac surgery. In comparison with industrialized countries, obesity may account for fewer adverse events in patients undergoing open-heart surgical procedures in South-Western Anatolia, a developing country sample.


Hepsini seç | Tümünü bırak | Seçimi çevir