Ohler L, Hoopes K, McCauley MF, DiSanto P. Cardiac transplantation: a review for critical care nurses.
J Intensive Care Med 1994;
9:211-26. [PMID:
10147461 DOI:
10.1177/088506669400900501]
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Abstract
Advances in immunology, immunosuppressive therapy, and preservation techniques have contributed to making cardiac transplantation an accepted therapy for end-stage heart disease. One-year survival rates now exceed 90% at some transplant centers. However, serious complications, such as infection, rejection, coronary artery disease, and malignancies, continue to plague long-term survival rates in this patient population. Balancing the immune system between infection and rejection requires the special expertise of experienced cardiologists and immunologists. An improved understanding of the immune system promises to increase long-term survival rates of cardiac transplant recipients. Critical care nurses require special assessment skills to meet the demanding challenges of cardiac transplant recipients in the immediate postoperative period. The impact of cardiac denervation, immunosuppression, and the risk for acute rejection add a different perspective for nursing interventions in the critical care environment. With mortality rates remaining at 8 to 10% for the first month following cardiac transplantation, the skill of critical care nurses is crucial to decreasing morbidity and increasing survival during the acute perioperative period.
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