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      Hyperlactatemia and Patient Outcomes After Pediatric Cardiac Surgery.

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      Critical care nurse
      AACN Publishing

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          Abstract

          Elevated serum lactate level, or hyperlactatemia, is often associated with alterations in tissue perfusion, increased risk for complications in the postoperative period, and patient mortality. Measuring lactate levels is a relatively simple and noninvasive method of obtaining useful data about an impending clinical deterioration in a seemingly hemodynamically stable patient. This article evaluates the current practice of measuring lactate levels in pediatric patients after cardiac surgery and the association between these levels and patient outcomes. The article addresses periods of increased risk for decreased perfusion, the critical postoperative period, use of lactate measurements in conjunction with a risk scoring system for pre-and postoperative congenital heart disease patients, and the implications of elevated lactate levels in nursing practice.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Crit Care Nurse
          Critical care nurse
          AACN Publishing
          1940-8250
          0279-5442
          Oct 2018
          : 38
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Lether Draben is a pediatric critical care nurse practitioner at Penn State Health, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center in Hershey, Pennsylvania. adraben@bellsouth.net.
          Article
          38/5/e1
          10.4037/ccn2018910
          30275069
          c97a54be-b535-4f11-b13a-9f4c021d8da8
          History

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