Heparin dose pre-CPB: 300–400 IU/kg IV (ACT >480 sec target)
Protamine dose: 1 mg per 100 IU heparin given (or per weight-based protocol)
Given slowly IV over 10–15 min — rapid injection causes hypotension, pulmonary hypertension, bradycardia
Target ACT returns to baseline (<150 sec)
Protamine reactions: anaphylaxis risk especially in fish allergy, prior NPH insulin use, prior vasectomy (anti-sperm antibodies may cross-react). Have adrenaline, calcium, and vasopressors immediately available.
Typical CPB Times (CABG)
Bypass time: 60–120 min
Cross-clamp time: 40–90 min
Rewarming: 15–30 min
Post-Operative ICU Management
Immediate handover from theatre: verify airway security, ventilator settings, lines (arterial, CVP, PA catheter if present), pacing wires, drain outputs, temperature, haemodynamic parameters, vasoactive infusions running.
Low CO with low HR; historical use in renal protection (abandoned)
Arrhythmogenic; mainly replaced by noradrenaline + dobutamine
Dobutamine
β1 inotrope; ↑ CO, ↓ SVR
Low cardiac output syndrome, RV failure
Tachyarrhythmia risk; wean as CO improves; check lactate
Milrinone
PDE-3 inhibitor; inotrope + vasodilator
RV failure, pulmonary hypertension, weaning from CPB
Hypotension common; long half-life; load cautiously
Ventilator Weaning Criteria
Haemodynamically stable — minimal vasoactive support
Temperature 36–37.5°C
GCS 15 / responding to commands
SpO2 >95% on FiO2 ≤0.4
PEEP ≤5 cmH2O
Tidal volume >5 mL/kg spontaneous effort
RR <25 per min on minimal support
pH 7.35–7.45, PaCO2 35–45 mmHg
Chest drain output <100 mL/h
No significant arrhythmia
Extubation Protocol
Wean to CPAP/PS trial 30 min
Pre-oxygenate 100% FiO2 × 3 min
Suction ETT and oropharynx
Deflate cuff and remove under direct instruction
High-flow O2 mask immediately post-extubation
Encourage cough and deep breathing within 15 min
Fast-track extubation (<6 h) for uncomplicated CABG reduces ICU LOS and improves outcomes. Nurse-led extubation protocols are now standard in many GCC cardiac ICUs.
Sternal Precautions & Early Mobilisation
Sternal Precautions (6–8 weeks)
No pushing/pulling with arms >2 kg
No lifting >1–2 kg
Log-roll to sit up (no bed-pull)
Support sternum with pillow when coughing
No driving for 6 weeks
Mobilisation Milestones
Day 0: Passive limb exercises in bed
Day 1: Sit out of bed × 2 (post-extubation)
Day 2: Stand and transfer; short walk in room
Day 3–4: Supervised corridor walking
Day 5–7: Ward discharge criteria met
Physiotherapy Role
Chest physiotherapy: incentive spirometry Q2h
Huffing and coughing technique
Leg exercises: prevent DVT (TED stockings + LMWH)
Monitor O2 sats during exercise
Discharge: cardiac rehab referral
Chest Drain Output Tracker
Enter hourly drain outputs (mL). An alert will trigger if output exceeds 200 mL/h for 2 or more consecutive hours.
Complications Management
Low Cardiac Output Syndrome (LCOS)
Defined as CI <2.0 L/min/m² or SBP <90 mmHg requiring haemodynamic support.
Clinical Features
Cool, clammy peripheries; mottling
Oliguria (<0.5 mL/kg/h)
Metabolic acidosis; rising lactate
Low mixed venous O2 saturation (<60%)
IABP — Intra-Aortic Balloon Pump
Indications: LCOS not responding to inotropes, unstable angina, pre-op in high-risk CABG, post-CABG cardiogenic shock
Inflates in diastole (augments diastolic pressure, improves coronary perfusion)
Deflates just before systole (reduces afterload)
Counterpulsation ratio: 1:1 (every beat), can wean to 1:2 then 1:3
Anticoagulation management (INR target 2.0–3.0 for HM3)
LVAD patients do NOT have a standard palpable pulse — use Doppler for blood pressure. MAP target 70–90 mmHg. Traditional NIBP cuffs unreliable; many centres use Doppler MAP as gold standard.
Prince Sultan Cardiac Center — Riyadh, KSALargest dedicated cardiac centre in Middle East; government referral hospital; performs >4,000 cardiac surgeries/year; strong congenital programme
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King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre (KFSH) — Riyadh & Jeddah, KSAPioneer in Saudi cardiac surgery; first cardiac transplant in Middle East; LVAD programme; internationally trained surgical team
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Heart Hospital — Hamad Medical Corporation, QatarQatar's national cardiac surgery centre; CABG, valve, TAVI, congenital; close links with international centres; rapid expansion pre-World Cup 2022
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National Heart Centre — Muscat, OmanNational referral centre; growing TAVI programme; congenital heart disease programme for paediatric patients
High CAD Prevalence in GCC
The GCC has among the world's highest rates of coronary artery disease (CAD), driven by:
Type 2 diabetes prevalence 15–25% (among highest globally)