Medical Moment: How the real-time blood monitor is saving lives in the OR

(WNDU) – More than 20,000 babies are born needing open heart surgery.

These complex procedures are a lifeline for kids with congenital heart defects. Many of these surgeries can take up to 12 hours.

Now, one surgeon has developed something that could transform the field of heart surgeries not only for babies but adults, too.

Critical time is lost every day during open heart surgeries as doctors wait on blood test results.

“We need a way of monitoring the status of the blood,” said Dr. William Decampli, a pediatric cardiac surgeon.

Blood is taken throughout an open heart surgery so t can be tested for coagulation. Getting results from the lab can take 20 to 30 minutes.

“We would be drawing four, five, six rounds of those tests, but each one is delayed in us getting back the answer,” Dr. Decampli said.

The issue is particularly critical for the youngest patients, who are more susceptible to complications.

“The risk to the child is a fatality,” Dr. Decampli said.

But now, surgeons have a new tool, a real-time blood monitor. The monitor can provide instant blood analysis by using a tiny optical fiber inserted directly into the heart-lung machine.

“The light is transmitted along a very tiny optical fiber,” Dr. Decampli continued. “That same optical fiber receives the signal that comes from the red blood cells as the light literally reflects off it.”

Results from the first clinical trial showed the real-time monitor was just as accurate as sending the samples to the lab. If more studies prove its effectiveness, the real-time blood monitor could be a game-changer and life-saver in the operating room.

Researchers also believe the real-time blood monitor could be used not only for heart surgeries, but for trauma patients and even COVID patients. The team hopes to have these devices in hospitals everywhere by the year 2030.

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