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Oral Care Associated With Less Microaspiration in Ventilated Cardiac Patients

Title: Oral Care Associated With Less Microaspiration in Ventilated Cardiac Patients
Authors: Patel, Nishant; Lin, Philip; Stack, Michael; Conrad, Janet M.; Fakioglu, Harun; Abomoelak, Bassam; Horvath, Karoly; Mehta, Devendra I.
Source: JPGN Reports ; volume 4, issue 1 ; ISSN 2691-171X 2691-171X
Publisher Information: Wiley
Publication Year: 2023
Collection: Wiley Online Library (Open Access Articles via Crossref)
Description: Background and Objective: Aspiration is common in mechanically ventilated patients and may predispose patients to aspiration pneumonia, chemical pneumonitis, and chronic lung damage. Pepsin A is a specific marker of gastric fluid aspiration and is often detected in ventilated pediatric patients. We investigated the effect of oral care and throat suctioning in the detection of pepsin A in tracheal aspirates (TAs) up to 4 hours after these procedures. Methods: Twelve pediatric patients between age 2 weeks to 14 years who underwent intubation for cardiac surgery were enrolled in this study. Six of the 12 patients were consented before their surgery with initial specimen collected at the time of intubation and last one shortly before extubation (intubation duration < 24 hours). The remaining 6 patients were consented after cardiac surgery. All specimens were collected per routine care per respiratory therapy protocol and shortly before extubation (intubation duration > 24 hours). Tracheal fluid aspirates were collected every 4 to 12 hours in the ventilated patients. Enzymatic assay for gastric pepsin A and protein determination were performed. The time of oral care and throat suctioning within 4 hours prior was recorded prospectively. Results: A total of 342 TA specimens were obtained from the 12 intubated pediatric patients during their course of hospitalization; 287 (83.9%) showed detectable total pepsin (pepsin A and C) enzyme activity (> 6 ng/mL) and 176 (51.5%) samples had detectable pepsin A enzyme levels (>6 ng/mL of pepsin A). Only 29 samples of 76 samples (38.2%) had evidence of microaspiration after receiving oral care, while 147 of 266 (55.3%) samples were pepsin A positive when no oral care was provided. Odds ratio is 0.50 (Cl 0.30–0.84), and the number needed to treat is 5.8 (Confidence interval 3.4–22.3). Testing air filters for pepsin was not beneficial. Conclusion: Oral care is a highly effective measure to prevent microaspiration of gastric fluid in ventilated pediatric patients. The ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
DOI: 10.1097/pg9.0000000000000290
DOI: 10.1097/PG9.0000000000000290
Availability: https://doi.org/10.1097/pg9.0000000000000290; https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1097/PG9.0000000000000290
Rights: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.93AF0D04
Database: BASE