38 research outputs found

    A rare variant of common arterial trunk.

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    A 13 day old baby was admitted to hospital with multiple abnormalities, increasing cyanosis, and cardiac failure. Cardiac catheterisation was performed on the day of admission and he died shortly after the procedure. A rare variant of common arterial trunk, in which the pulmonary arteries arose directly from the underside of the aortic arch, was found at necropsy

    Surgical repair of the prolapsing anterior leaflet in degenerative mitral valve disease.

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    BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE STUDY: Repair of the prolapsing anterior leaflet (AML) in degenerative mitral valve disease is more demanding than that of the posterior leaflet. We reviewed our experience in the past eight years, to examine the safety, efficacy and stability of various repair artifices. METHODS: Between January 1989 and December 1997, 102 patients (mean age 64 years; range: 26-86 years) with mitral regurgitation (MR) due to prolapse of the anterior or both mitral leaflets underwent mitral valve repair. Sixty-six patients were in NYHA class > or =III, and 94 had MR grade >II. Acute endocarditis was present in 12 patients and Barlow disease in 16. Surgical techniques consisted of chordal shortening (n = 36), chordal transposition (n = 16), papillary muscle shortening or plication (n = 10), flip-over (n = 20) and artificial chordae implantation (n = 20). RESULTS: There was no early mortality; one patient required early mitral valve replacement (MVR) for late-appearing systolic anterior motion, and one patient benefited from a successful re-repair on day 8 for partial posterior leaflet desinsertion. Mean follow up was 30 months (range: 3-92 months); there were four late deaths (two valve-related cerebrovascular accidents); two patients required re-repair (one after three months for prosthetic ring thrombosis, and one after 10 months for rupture of shortened chordae (corrected by flip-over)). Five patients had MVR between four and 32 months later: one for mitral stenosis due to posterior leaflet calcification, and four for recurrent MR due to the rupture of shortened chordae (n = 3) or plicated papillary muscle (n = 1). One patient suffered bacterial endocarditis which was treated medically. Of the 92 remaining patients with valve repair, 81 are currently asymptomatic, five are in NYHA class II and four in class III. Transesophageal echocardiographic restudy (n = 76) at a mean of 30 months after surgery revealed no MR in 68 patients, and MR of grade <II in three. CONCLUSIONS: AML prolapse repair is safe, durable, and therefore can be attempted even in mildly symptomatic patients. However, chordal shortening should be substituted by implantation of artificial chordae or by the flip-over technique

    Transfer of the posterior leaflet of the tricuspid valve to the mitral valve.

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    BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE STUDY: Coverage of large commissural defects may present a surgical challenge in mitral valve repair, for which the transfer of posterior tricuspid valve leaflet tissue is an attractive approach. METHODS: Five patients aged between 35 and 55 years underwent this procedure. After wide excision of the diseased mitral commissures, the posterior leaflet of the tricuspid valve was carefully checked, removed with its subvalvular apparatus, and transferred to the commissural area of the mitral valve. The stress on the papillary muscle suture was relieved by reinforcement of the free edge of the transferred leaflet by natural or artificial chordae. The tricuspid valve was repaired using either a sliding plasty or an annuloplasty. RESULTS: One patient who had no reinforcement of the subvalvular apparatus had a papillary muscle rupture and required mitral valve replacement during the early postoperative period. The four remaining patients remained asymptomatic and had no or trivial mitral regurgitation after a median of 13 months (range: 3-18 months), with excellent result at transesophageal echocardiography. CONCLUSION: We conclude that transfer of the tricuspid valve leaflet allows coverage of large commissural defect, and deserves a place among the surgeon's arsenal of reconstructive techniques for mitral valve repair

    Multilevel somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) for spinal cord monitoring in descending thoracic and thoraco-abdominal aortic surgery

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    race-abdominal (11 cases) repair. An aortic dissection was found in 11 cases (acute in 6). Somatosensory evoked potentials were obtained by unilateral left and right posterior tibial nerve (PTN) stimulation at the ankle and recordings were performed on four channels: peripheral nerve, lumbar spinal, brain-stem, and cortical recordings. Our experience led to the following current strategy: the establishment of atrio(aorto)-femoral(aortic) bypass (29 cases), proximal and distal aortic cross-clamping, aortic repair with reimplantation of the culprit artery(ies) as indicated by SEP alterations. Five types of SEP alterations were defined on the basis of the neural level involved: type I (27.7% of cases) = distal spinal ischemia due to proximal aortic cross-clamping in the absence of bypass; type II (21.3%) = PTN ischemia due to left common femoral artery cross-clamping; type III (12.8%)= segmental spinal ischemia due to the exclusion of critical feeding arteries; type IV (4.3%)= ischemia in the left carotid artery territory, type V (4.3%) = global brain hypoperfusion due to systemic hypotension. Forty-five patients survived the operation and could be tested for neurological dysfunction. Three patients presented a postoperative spinal cord deficit, but this deficit was already present preoperatively in one case, so that the actual incidence of a new paraplegia in our series was 2/45 cases (4.4%). One of the two cases was clearly a delayed paraplegia with SEP alterations appearing several hours after the operation. Somatosensory evoked potentials were evaluated on the basis of their sensitivity, specificity, and impact on the surgical strategy. Regarding SEP sensitivity, we did not encounter any unexpected immediate paraplegia, but the critical factor appeared to be the duration of SEP absence due to spinal cord ischemia, which, according to the literature, should never exceed 30 min; after a longer absence, SEP return does not guarantee neurological recovery. Somatosensory evoked potential specificity was also 100%, but only 58% of the abnormalities found were actually consequent to spinal cord ischemia, the rest of the abnormalities being consequent to peripheral nerve or brain ischemia. Finally, SEP monitoring had a significant impact on surgical strategy in 19% of the cases. It is concluded that distal aortic perfusion and multilevel SEP monitoring play a significant role in preventing paraplegia in descending aorta surgery

    Free internal mammary artery graft in myocardial revascularization.

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    Between August 1986 and March 1993, 124 patients (102 men; mean age of 59 years) underwent myocardial revascularization with the use of at least one free internal mammary artery (FIMA). This group represents 4.5% of the 2725 coronary bypasses performed during the same period. Seventy-six patients (61%) had suffered from at least one previous myocardial infarction. Forty-five patients (36%) had unstable angina; three-vessel disease was found in 100 cases (80.5%) and a left ventricular ejection fraction lower than 0.4 in 22 (17.7%). There were 18 (14.5%) redo procedures and 90 (72.5%) bilateral internal mammary artery (IMA) grafts. The reasons for using a FIMA were: too short an internal mammary artery pedicle in 83 patients, IMA injury at harvesting in 30 patients and post-bypass ischaemia in areas grafted with pedicled IMA (PIMA) in 11 patients. Cardiopulmonary bypass, moderate hypothermia (30 degrees C) and crystalloid anterograde and retrograde cardioplegia were used in all cases. Sixty-seven FIMA grafts were anastomosed directly to the ascending aorta; 57 were sutured via a saphenous hood using a running suture of polypropylene 7/0 and three were anastomosed end-to-end to a PIMA graft. FIMA grafts were directed to the left anterior descending (34%), the circumflex (37%) and the right coronary artery (29%). In total, 179 anastomoses were constructed using 127 FIMA, 136 using PIMA and 158 using saphenous veins (3.8 anastomoses per patient). Hospital mortality and postoperative myocardial infarction rates were 5.6% (seven patients) and 3.2% (four patients), respectively. Cardiac-related mortality was 3.2% (four patients); three of these four patients had been operated on for evolving infarction and one underwent a redo procedure. Four of the 117 survivors died later on; in two, it was cardiac-related and a result of global heart failure at 9 and 12 months. Of the 113 remaining patients, 106 are symptom free after a mean follow-up of 28.2 (range 3-84) months. Fifty-nine patients (50.4%) were restudied by angiography at a mean interval of 15 months. Patency rates of FIMA anastomosed either directly to the aorta or via a saphenous hood were 82.8 or 89.7%, respectively. Patency rates of FIMA directed to the left anterior descending, the circumflex and the right coronary artery were 85.7, 88 and 83.3%, respectively. Global FIMA patency was 86.4%, while global PIMA patency was 100%. The FIMA mid-term patency rates compare unfavourably with those of PIMA: FIMA should therefore be restricted to the cases where PIMA or other pedicled arterial grafts are unavailable

    Bilateral Mammary Grafting - Clinical, Functional and Angiographic Assessment in 400 Consecutive Patients

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    Between October 1985 and September 1991, 400 patients benefited from bilateral internal mammary artery (BIMA) grafting. Of these, 354 (88.5%) were male and the average age was 57.4 years. There were 132 (33%) urgent procedures, 55 in diabetic patients (14%) and 15 in end-stage renal failures (4%). An average of 3.9 distal anastomoses (AN) per patient was undertaken, 2.8 using arterial grafts. Two hundred sixty-nine patients (67.2%) received exclusively arterial grafts. Right internal mammary artery (RIMA) grafts were predominantly directed to the left coronary system (348 AN = 78%) and particularly to the circumflex (CX) area. Postoperative myocardial infarction was diagnosed in 16 patients (4%). Reoperation was required for early myocardial ischemia in 12 patients (3%) and for excessive bleeding in 23 patients (5.8 %). Sternal complications occurred in 18 patients (4.1 %), 5 in diabetic patients (9 %) and 3 in renal patients (20%). The hospital mortality was 2% (8 patients, 3 cardiac causes). Follow-up averages 37.7 months. Late mortality was 3 % (12 patients, 4 cardiac causes). Angina recurred in 12 patients (3.1 %). The maximal stress test at a mean interval of 9 months was abnormal in 7.4% (21 patients). One hundred eighty-one patients (47%) consented to an angiographic restudy at an average of 13 months postoperatively. Pedicled RIMA patency rates equal those of pedicled LIMA (95.1 vs 96.7, NS) and the grafted vessel does not alter the patency rates of IMA AN. A pedicled IMA graft is preferable to a free IMA graft (96.1 vs 79.6, P < 0.001). The early patency rates of free IMA grafts and of saphenous grafts do not differ significantly (79.6 vs 84.7, NS): the former reflect the delicacy of the proximal AN and should subsequently behave similar to those of the pedicled AN grafts. Bilateral internal mammary artery grafting is expected to maintain excellent results over the long-term on the condition that it rests on reasonable indications and a thoughtful operative strategy

    Orthotopic heart transplantation in situs inversus.

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    The case of a successful orthotopic heart transplantation for complete situs inversus with double-inlet left ventricle and anomalies of the systemic venous return is reported. A piece of aortic homograft and a composite conduit made of the recipient right atrium and pericardium were used to connect, respectively, the left superior vena cava and the hepatic veins to the right-sided atrium of the donor heart

    Radical debridement and omental transposition for post sternotomy mediastinitis

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    OBJECTIVE: Reported mortality for postoperative mediastinitis treated by debridement alone can reach 40%. The authors' experience with radical debridement and omental transposition is reviewed. METHODS: Between May 1990 and August 1996, 14 patients with untractable mediastinitis had a transfer of the greater omentum: 11 after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) (6 bilateral internal thoracic arteries ITA grafts), one after a heart transplant, one after an aortic valve replacement and CABG, and one after a repair of the aortic isthmus related to a motor vehicle accident. The mean age was 63 +/- 8 years. Infection was proven in all patients by cultures of intraoperative specimens. Two patients had such a large sternal defect that no primary closure could be attempted. The remaining 12 patients had a mean of 1.4 +/- 0.7 previous debridement. Five patients had a total sternectomy. After radical debridement, the omentum was transferred over the entirety of the wound and covered with a meshed thin skin graft. All patients had a minimum of 4 weeks of i.v. antibiotic therapy. RESULTS: There was no operative death. Apart from one focal necrosis and one traumatic dehiscence of the omentum, there was no hospital complication. Sepsis was controlled in all patients. The median hospital stay was 31 days (range 20-154 days). At a median follow-up of 20 months (range: 6-44 months), there were two late deaths: one sudden and unexpected death and one after a re-do CABG. The remaining patients had resumed their previous activities. One patient had developed an incisional hernia and another underwent further surgery for cosmetic reasons. CONCLUSION: Radical debridement and omental transposition may achieve a cure for postoperative mediastinitis with good mid-term results
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