The diagnosis and management of congenital heart disease (CHD), the most common inborn defect, has been a tremendous success of modern medicine. With the development of diagnostic techniques, surgical procedures and interventional techniques, more than 90% of CHD children can survive to adulthood. Consequently, the prevalence of patients with CHD has shifted away from infancy and childhood towards adulthood. Adult CHD cardiology is now encompassing not only young or middle-aged adults but also patients aged above 60 years. Standardized guidelines can provide good theoretical support for the comprehensive management of adult CHD. Ten years after the European Society of Cardiology guidelines for the management of grown-up CHD released in 2010, the new version was officially released in August 2020. The new version of guidelines updated the classification and stratification of diseases, comprehensive intervention methods and intervention timing, and put forward some new concepts, new intervention standards and methods. For adult CHD that has not been repaired or needs to be repaired again, the indication and mode of surgical intervention and perioperative management have a great impact on the prognosis. The new version of the guidelines provides a detailed description of the surgical and intervention indications and methods for different diseases, and clarifies the management methods for high-risk groups. This article attempts to interpret this newly updated guideline from the perspective of a surgeon, sort out several key diseases introduced by the guideline, and strives to provide a concise and actionable guideline for domestic counterparts.
European system for cardiac operative risk evaluation(EuroSCORE) is one of the widely used and influential cardiac surgery risk assessment system. It was originally used to predict the quantitative score of probability of death after cardiac surgery. After that, it has been developed to predict long-term mortality and survival rate, ICU residence time, treatment costs, main complications and so on. EuroSCORE Ⅱ is the latest version, which is more accurate in predicting mortality, long term survival rate than the old one. But there are also some limitations as predicting limited range of the end, underestimating the mortality of critically endangered patients, lacking adequate preoperative risk factors and so on. This review article focuses on the production, development and clinical application of EuroSCORE.
Local treatment improves the outcomes for oligometastatic disease, an intermediate state between locoregional and widespread disease. However, consensus about the definition, diagnosis and treatment of oligometastatic oesophagogastric cancer is lacking. The first edition "Definition, diagnosis and treatment of oligometastatic oesophagogastric cancer: A Delphi consensus study in Europe" was published on February 15, 2023 by 65 European medical specialists. In this article, the consensus will be interpreted to provide new idea for the diagnosis and treatment of oligometastatic oesophagogastric cancer for Chinese clinicians.
Objective To summarize the nutritional assessment methods for liver cancer patients and their development, and to provide reference for rationally nutritional assessment and nutritional support. Method Domestic and foreign literatures were searched to summarize the nutritional assessment methods for liver cancer patients and their development, in order to determine a practical and feasible assessment method. Results The evaluation validity of traditionally nutritional assessment methods which contained many individual indicators was low. But subjective global assessment (SGA), mini nutritional assessment (MNA), and nutritional risk screening 2002 (NRS-2002) had similar evaluation validity, this 3 kinds of nutritional assessment methods were more suitable for liver cancer patients compared with the traditionally nutritional assessment methods. Conclusion The clinician should simultaneously apply SGA, MNA, NRS-2002, and other comprehensively nutritional assessment methods, as well as related anthropometric and laboratory indexes, to get a more accurate assessment of the nutritional status for patients with liver cancer.
Objective To evaluate the impact of total thyroidectomy on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in patients with nodular goiter. Methods The patients who underwent total thyroidectomy from Jan. 2009 to Dec. 2011 in our hospital were retrospectively analyzed with regard to the quality of life (total thyroidectomy group). The patients with similar demographic features who underwent hemithyroidectomy during the same period were matched as control (hemi-thyroidectomy group). The validated HRQOL instrument, which was the Euro quality of life-5D (EQ-5D), was applied to measure the HRQOL. Comparison of HRQOL in patients of 2 groups was performed, meanwhile, the data of total thyroidectomy group was compared with data of normal population who were obtained from The Forth National Health Survey. Results There were 26 and 28 valid questionnaires returned for the total thyroidectomy group and hemithyroi-dectomy group respectively. The demographic features of patients in 2 groups were comparable. No significant variancecould be found between the 2 groups that there were no significant differences on the mobility, self-care, usual activities,pain/discomfort, anxiety/depression, and visual analogous scales (P>0.05). Furthermore, no significant differences in HRQOL were found in EQ-5D questionnaire compared with normal population derived from The Forth National Health Survey (P>0.05), except that there were more patients complained of moderate and severe pain/discomfort in the total thyroidectomy group 〔30.8% (8/26) vs.9.2% (16 330/177 501), P<0.01〕. Conclusion Total thyroidectomy appears to have little impact on the quality of life in the patients with nodular goiter.
In order to guide diagnosis and treatment in children with sleep disordered breathing aged 1 to 23 months, the European Respiratory Society(ERS) summarized the evidence and released the European Respiratory Society statement based on clinical experience in 2016. This article aims to interpret the ERS statement. Children with apparent upper airway obstruction during wakefulness and those with SDB symptoms and complex conditions requires treatment. Adenotonsillectomy and continuous positive airway pressure are the most frequently used treatment measures along with interventions targeting specific conditions. Obstructive SDB in children aged 1 to 23 months is a multifactorial disorder that requires objective assessment and treatment of all underlying abnormalities.
Abstract: Objective To evaluate the prediction validation of European system for cardiac operative risk evaluation (EuroSCORE) in prolonged intensive care unit (ICU) stay, mortality, and major postoperative complications for Chinese patients operated for acquired heart valve disease. Methods Between January 2004 and January 2006, 2 218 consecutive patients treated for acquired heart valve diseases were enrolled in Fu Wai Hospital. All these patients accepted valvular surgery. Both logistic model and additive model were applied to EuroSCORE to evaluate its ability in predicting mortality, prolonged ICU stay and major postoperative complications of patients who had undergone heart valve surgery. An receiver operating characteristic curve( ROC) area was used to test the discrimination of the models. Calibration was assessed by HosmerLemeshow goodnessoffit statistic. Results Discriminating abilities of logistic and additive EuroSCORE algorithm were 0.710 and 0.690 respectively for mortality, 0.670 and 0.660 for prolonged ICU stay, 0.650 and 0.640 for heart failure, 0.720 and 0.710 for respiratory failure, 0.700 and 0.740 for renal failure, and 0.540 and 0.550 for reexploration for bleeding. There was significant difference between logistic and additive algorithm in predicting renal failure and heart failure (Plt;0.05). Calibration of logistic and additive algorithm in predicting mortality, prolonged ICU stay and major postoperative complications were not satisfactory. However, logistic algorithm could be used to predict postoperative respiratory failure (P=0.120). Conclusion EuroSCORE is not an accurate predictor in predicting mortality, prolonged ICU stay and major postoperative complications, but the logistic model can be used to predict postoperative respiratory failure in Chinese patients operated for acquired heart valve diseases.
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) of the lower extremities, which poses a major challenge in the field of global public health, has seen a rising trend in its incidence and disability rate year by year. With the continuous innovation of new diagnostic techniques, imaging evaluation methods, and treatment strategies, profound changes have taken place in the diagnosis and treatment paradigm in this field. Based on the “European Society for Vascular Surgery (ESVS) 2024 Clinical Practice Guidelines on the Management of Asymptomatic Lower Limb Peripheral Arterial Disease and Intermittent Claudication” issued by the European Society for Vascular Surgery in 2024, we systematically reviewed the relevant international guidelines in recent years and conducted horizontal comparisons. Combining with the latest clinical research evidence, we conducted an in-depth analysis from the perspective of evidence-based medicine on the strategic evolution, technical key point updates, and clinical evidence levels of endovascular treatment for lower extremity PAD. The aim is to provide an evidence-based medical basis for clinical decision-making.
ObjectiveTo evaluate the validity of European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation (EuroSCORE) Ⅱ for predicting in-hospital mortality and prolonged ICU stay after Sun's procedure (total aortic arch replacement with stented elephant trunk implantation) for Stanford type A aortic dissection (STAAD). MethodsClinical data of 384 STAAD patients undergoing Sun's procedure in Beijing Anzhen Hospital between February 2009 and February 2012 were retrospectively analyzed, including 228 (59.38%) patients with acute STAAD. Accoding to EuroSCORE Ⅱ to predict postoperative mortality, all the patients were divided into a low-risk group, a medium-risk group, a high-risk group and an extremely-high-risk group. There were 296 patients including 52 females in the low-risk group with their age of 45.39±10.75 years, 70 patients including 19 females in the medium-risk group with their age of 47.67±11.26 years, 13 patients including 5 females in the high-risk group with their age of 53.08±4.94 years, and 5 patients including 1 female patient in the extremely-high-risk group with their age of 41.60±11.08 years. All the patients received Sun's procedure under deep hypothermic circulatory arrest and antegrade selective cerebral perfusion. EuroSCORE Ⅱ was used to predict postoperative mortality and prolonged ICU stay. ResultsIn-hospital mortality was 8.07% (31/384). Mean length of ICU stay was 3.06 days. Length of ICU stay of 42 patients was longer than 7 days. For low-risk group, the predicted mortality was lower than the actual mortality. For medium-risk, high-risk and extremely-high-risk groups, the predicted mortality was higher than the actual mortality. EuroSCORE Ⅱ showed unsatisfactory discriminatory ability to predict postoperative mortality and prolonged ICU stay. The area under ROC curve were 0.49 and 0.52 respectively. The calibration was also poor for predicting postoperative mortality and prolonged ICU stay (P<0.001). ConclusionsEuroSCORE Ⅱ is not satisfactory for predicting mortality and prolonged ICU stay after Sun's procedure for the treatment of STAAD. A new risk evaluating system specific for STAAD is needed.