ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
    
PDF of Article    Article Full Text 

Home
Journal
Now in Medline / Index Medicus & ISI



Subscribe
Search
Discussion Forums
Join
Multimedia
Meeting Highlights
Lecture Presentations
Surgical Video Library
Private Lecture Series
Audio Interviews
Resources
Medline
Learning Center
Meetings
For Authors
Editorial Board
Sponsors
More Sponsors

Site News
Sign up for our newsletter:





DrSinclair.JPG: Extra-Anatomic Redo of MIDCAB and OPCAB: An Early Experience

(#2000-23418 ... April 18, 2000)

Michael C. Sinclair, MD,1 Martin LeBoutillier III, MD,1 William Gee, MD,2 Theodore Phillips, MD,1 Raymond L. Singer, MD1

Lehigh Valley Hospital, Allentown, Pennsylvania
1Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery 2Vascular Laboratory, Department of Surgery



ABSTRACT


Background: Eighteen patients with unstable angina underwent repeat myocardial revascularization without cardiopulmonary bypass using saphenous vein grafts from either the left (13) or right (2) axillary arteries or the descending thoracic aorta (3). Patients' ages ranged from 53 to 85 years. Left ventricular ejection fractions ranged from 15% to 60%.

Methods: In 14 patients, the heart was exposed through an anterior thoracotomy, a minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass (MIDCAB) technique. In 3 patients a left posterolateral thoractomy (lateral MIDCAB) was performed. One patient underwent repeat sternotomy (off-pump coronary artery bypass: OPCAB). In MIDCAB and lateral MIDCAB patients, the "target" vessel was a coronary artery in 8 patients and a previously placed vein graft in the remaining 9 patients. One patient underwent repeat sternotomy, and 3 coronary arteries were bypassed with a complex vein graft attached to the left axillary artery. Two patients died of mesenteric ischemia on the 2nd and 7th postoperative day. The remainder of patients were discharged from the hospital free of angina. Early graft patency was demonstrated by noninvasive vascular laboratory testing and/or angiography in the 13 survivors in whom the axillary artery had been the site of the proximal anastomosis.

Results: Follow-up ranged from 1 to 25 months. No other patients have died, and none have undergone additional surgical or catheter-based procedures. Three patients have developed recurrent angina, and in 4 patients the extra-anatomic bypass grafts have apparently become occluded.

Conclusion: Extra-anatomic, off-pump bypass from the axillary artery or descending thoracic aorta to one or more coronary arteries can be performed safely in seriously ill patients requiring a repeat bypass procedure. The early results, regarding relief of angina, are encouraging.



AUTHOR/ARTICLE INFORMATION


Presented, in part, at the Utrecht MICABG Workshop V, September 3-4, 1999, at Utrecht University Hospital, Utrecht, The Netherlands

Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Michael C. Sinclair, MD, Lehigh Valley Hospital, Cedar Crest & I-78, P.O. Box 689, Allentown, PA 18105-1556, Phone: (610) 402-1296, Fax: (610) 402-1667, Email: sally.lutz@lvh.com

Submitted April 10, 2000; accepted April 18, 2000.

 


ISSN#: 1522-6662
Copyright 2008 Forum Multimedia Publishing, LLC. All rights reserved.

The material available at this site is for educational purposes only and is NOT intended for any diagnostic, clinically related, or other purpose. Forum Multimedia Publishing, LLC, assumes no responsibility for any use or misuse of this material and makes no warranty or representation of any kind with respect to the material available at this site.