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1.
J Clin Med ; 13(17)2024 Aug 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39274267

RESUMEN

Background: Early diagnosis of post-operative complications is an urgent task, allowing timely prescribing of appropriate therapy and reducing the cost of patient treatment. The purpose of this study was to determine whether an integrated approach based on clinical data, along with metabolites and biomarkers, had greater predictive value than the models built on fewer data in the early diagnosis of post-operative complications after cardiac surgery. Methods: The study included patients (n = 62) admitted for planned cardiac surgery (coronary artery bypass grafting with cardiopulmonary bypass) with (n = 26) or without (n = 36) post-operative complications. Clinical and laboratory data on the first day after surgery were analyzed. Additionally, patients' blood samples were collected before and on the first day after surgery to determine biomarkers and metabolites. Results: Multivariate PLS-DA models, predicting the presence or absence of post-operative complications, were built using clinical data, concentrations of metabolites and biomarkers, and the entire data set (ROC-AUC = 0.80, 0.71, and 0.85, respectively). For comparison, we built univariate models using the EuroScore2 and SOFA scales, concentrations of lactate, the dynamic changes of 4-hydroxyphenyllactic acid, and the sum of three sepsis-associated metabolites (ROC-AUC = 0.54, 0.79, 0.62, 0.58, and 0.70, respectively). Conclusions: The proposed complex model using the entire dataset had the best characteristics, which confirms the expediency of searching for new predictive models based on a variety of factors.

2.
J Pers Med ; 11(11)2021 Oct 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34834465

RESUMEN

Cardiac surgery remains a field of medicine with a high percentage of postoperative complications, including infectious ones. Modern data indicate a close relationship of infectious disorders with pathological changes in the composition of the gut microbiome; however, the extent of such changes in cardiac surgery patients is not fully clarified. In this prospective, observational, single center, pilot study, 72 patients were included, 12 among them with the infectious complications. We analyzed the features of the fecal microbiota before and in the early postoperative period, as one of the markers for predicting the occurrence of bacterial infection. We also discovered the significant change in microbial composition in the group of patients with infectious complications compared to the non-infectious group before and after cardiac surgery, despite the intra-individual variation in composition of gut microbiome. Our study demonstrated that the group of patients that had a bacterial infection in the early postoperative period already had an altered microbial composition even before the surgery. Further studies will evaluate the clinical significance of the identified proportions of individual taxa of the intestinal microbiota and consider the microbiota as a novel target for reducing the risk of infectious complications.

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