Introduction. It is common practice in on-pump cardiac surgery to stop
mechanical ventilation when extracorporeal circulation is started or to
continue with low tidal volumes. The aim of this study was to investigate
whether patients ventilated with low tidal volumes had a lower percentage of
postoperative pulmonary complications compared to patients who were not
ventilated during cardiopulmonary bypass. Material and Methods. This
retrospective study included patients who underwent coronary artery bypass
graft surgery over a period of 14 months. Patients with lung diseases and
those with an ejection fraction < 30% were excluded from the study. Results.
A total of 499 patients were included in the study. Of these, 398 were
ventilated with low tidal volumes, while 101 patients were not ventilated
during extracorporeal circulation. The groups did not differ in baseline
characteristics, comorbidities, and intraoperative data. Pulmonary
complications were equally prevalent in both groups (ventilated 16%, not
ventilated 17.8%). The most frequent were the need for prolonged mechanical
ventilation (ventilated 5.8%, not ventilated 5.9%), and pleural effusions
(ventilated 4.8%, not ventilated 5.9%). The incidence of pneumonia was
identical in both groups (2%). Other complications were less frequent.
Duration of mechanical ventilation after surgery, stay in the intensive care
unit, and in-hospital mortality did not differ significantly between the
groups. Conclusion. Pulmonary complications after cardiac surgery are still
common. The experience at our clinic showed that the choice of mechanical
ventilation strategy during cardiopulmonary bypass does not affect
postoperative pulmonary complications.