14 research outputs found

    Outcomes of Emergent Isolated Coronary Bypass Grafting in Heart Failure Patients

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    : Patients with previously diagnosed HF are at greater risk for subsequent morbidity and mortality when hospitalized for an Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI). The purpose of our study was to describe the time trend of the incidence of emergent CABG in patients with and without HF, the clinical characteristics, outcomes, and the risk factors for mortality of surgical revascularization in the short and medium term. This was a single-center retrospective observational study of patients who underwent isolated emergency CABG from January 2009 to January 2020. A propensity-score matching analysis yielded two comparable groups (n = 430) of patients without (n = 215) and with (n = 215) heart failure. In-hospital mortality did not differ in the two groups (2.8%; p > 0.9); the patients with heart failure presented more frequently with cardiogenic shock, and there was an association with mortality and mechanical circulatory support (OR 16.7-95% CI 3.31-140; p = 0.002) and postoperative acute renal failure (OR 15.9-95% CI 0.66-203; p = 0.036). In the early- and mid-term, heart failure and NSTEMI were associated with mortality (HR 3.47-95% CI 1.15-10.5; p = 0.028), along with age (HR 1.28-95% CI 1.21-1.36; p < 0.001). Surgical revascularization offers an excellent solution for patients with acute coronary syndrome, leading to a good immediate prognosis even in those with chronic heart failure. © 2022 by the authors

    Outcomes of Emergent Isolated Coronary Bypass Grafting in Heart Failure Patients

    Get PDF
    Patients with previously diagnosed HF are at greater risk for subsequent morbidity and mortality when hospitalized for an Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI). The purpose of our study was to describe the time trend of the incidence of emergent CABG in patients with and without HF, the clinical characteristics, outcomes, and the risk factors for mortality of surgical revascularization in the short and medium term. This was a single-center retrospective observational study of patients who underwent isolated emergency CABG from January 2009 to January 2020. A propensity-score matching analysis yielded two comparable groups (n = 430) of patients without (n = 215) and with (n = 215) heart failure. In-hospital mortality did not differ in the two groups (2.8%; p > 0.9); the patients with heart failure presented more frequently with cardiogenic shock, and there was an association with mortality and mechanical circulatory support (OR 16.7–95% CI 3.31–140; p = 0.002) and postoperative acute renal failure (OR 15.9–95% CI 0.66–203; p = 0.036). In the early- and mid-term, heart failure and NSTEMI were associated with mortality (HR 3.47–95% CI 1.15–10.5; p = 0.028), along with age (HR 1.28–95% CI 1.21–1.36; p < 0.001). Surgical revascularization offers an excellent solution for patients with acute coronary syndrome, leading to a good immediate prognosis even in those with chronic heart failure

    Mechanical Properties and Biological Interaction of Aortic Clamps. Are These All Minimally Invasive?

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    Objective: Although specifically designed aortic clamps are mainstay of minimally invasive cardiac surgery, so far, no comparative reports about their mechanical properties and interaction with the aortic wall have been reported. In this study, the generated force in the clamps’ jaws and the biological response of the aorta after clamping are evaluated. Methods: The jaw force of five commercially available clamps [Geister, Cygnet, Cardiovision (CV) 195.10, CV 195.40, and CV 195.83] was assessed by clamping a 2.2-mm compression load cell with a dedicated computer universal serial bus interface at the proximal, the middle, and the distal site from the fulcrum. Biological response of the aortic wall was assessed in five minipigs (weight, 38Y40 kg) that underwent thoracic aorta clamping and leakage point test. Immunohistochemistry and morphometric analysis were carried out for each aortic segment tested. Results: Force generation pattern is peculiar of each clamp, being higher in the proximal and the middle portion and lower in the distal part. One clamp (Cygnet) exhibited homogeneous maximal force generation at all three sites. All clamps exhibited peculiar crushing artifacts. Avariable degree of endothelial layer disruption occurred in all clamping tests; three clamps (CV 195.10, Cygnet, and Geister) had the lower amount of intact endothelium. The clamping force was not associated with the degree of endothelial disruption (P value was not significant). Conclusions: The choice of a clamp that is not only minimally invasive in design but also least traumatic will help avoid complications of aortic manipulation

    Echocardiographic-based treatment of functional tricuspid regurgitation

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    ObjectivesFunctional tricuspid regurgitation (FTR) worsens over time, and its natural history is unfavorable. An aggressive surgical strategy, using the echocardiographic systolic dimensions of the tricuspid annulus (sysTA), can be helpful to reduce the detrimental late effects of FTR.MethodsFrom March 2006 to February 2008, 298 patients, with at least FTR grade 1+, underwent mitral valve surgery. Of these 298 patients, 167 underwent tricuspid repair (treated group [T], moderate-or-greater FTR in 108 and mild in 59, with sysTA > 24 mm) and 137 did not (untreated group [UT], moderate-or-greater FTR in 16 and mild in 115; 81 with sysTA > 24 mm and 34 with sysTA of ≤ 24 mm). The 256 survivors underwent echocardiographic examination at a mean follow-up of 13 ± 8 months.ResultsPreoperatively, at discharge, and at the follow-up examination, the mean FTR grade was 1.11 ± 0.32, 0.87 ± 0.49, and 1.03 ± 0.57 (P = NS) in the UT group and 2.11 ± 0.92, 0.45 ± 0.36, and 0.48 ± 0.32 (P < .001) in the T group. A total of 24 patients had FTR grade 2 or greater, 16 (14.5%) in the UT group and 8 (5.5%) in the T group (P = .026). In the UT group, 10 of 16 patients had sysTA of 25 to 28 mm and 6 of 10 had sysTA greater than 28 mm. No patient with mild FTR and sysTA of 24 mm or less had an increased FTR grade. Globally, 12 patients (10.9%) had an increased FTR grade in the UT group versus none in the T group (P < .001). Patients with postoperative atrial fibrillation had less residual FTR if annuloplasty had been performed (1.6 ± 0.7 vs 0.91 ± 0.63, P = .005).ConclusionsAn aggressive strategy for FTR correction, using the sysTA, was able to reduce the FTR grade 1 year after surgery, but mitral surgery alone could not

    Ten-year experience with sutureless Perceval bioprosthesis: single-centre analysis in 1157 implants

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    Aims: We describe long-term clinical and echocardiographic outcomes in the largest single-centre cohort of patients who underwent aortic valve replacement (AVR) with sutureless Perceval (CorCym, Italy) bioprosthesis. Methods: Between March 2011 and March 2021, 1157 patients underwent AVR with Perceval bioprosthesis implantation. Mean age was 77 ± 6 years (range: 46-89 years) and mean EuroSCORE II was 6.7 ± 3.2% (range: 1.7-14.2%). Concomitant procedures were performed in 266 patients (23%). Results: Thirty-day mortality was 1.38% (16/1157). Eight hundred and twenty of 891 (92%) isolated AVRs underwent minimally invasive surgery with a ministernotomy (n = 196) or right minithoracotomy (n = 624) approach. Cardiopulmonary bypass and aortic cross-clamp times were 81.1 ± 24.3 and 50.6 ± 11.7 min for isolated AVR and 144.5 ± 34.7 and 96.4 ± 21.6 min for combined procedures. At mean follow-up of 53.08 ± 6.7 months (range: 1-120.5 months), survival was 96.5% and mean transvalvular pressure gradient was 13.7 ± 5.8 mmHg. Left ventricular mass decreased from 152.8 to 116.1 g/m2 (P &lt; 0.001) and moderate paravalvular leakage occurred in three patients without haemolysis not requiring any treatment. Freedom from reoperation was 97.6%. Eight patients required surgical reintervention and 19 patients transcatheter valve-in-valve procedure for structural prosthesis degeneration at a mean of 5.6 years after first operation (range: 2-9 years). Conclusion: AVR with a Perceval bioprosthesis is associated with good clinical results and excellent haemodynamic performance in our 10-year experience. Structural degeneration rate of Perceval is comparable with other bioprosthetic aortic valves. Sutureless technology may reduce operative time especially in combined procedures and enable minimally invasive AVR
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