|
 |

| The
Heart Surgery Forum, Volume 6, Issue 3 |
Conversions in Off-Pump Coronary Surgery
(#2003-2222)
Emir Mujanovic, Emir Kabil, Mehdin Hadziselimovic, Muniba Softic, Azur Azabagic, Jacob Bergsland
Cardiovascular Clinic, University Clinical Center Tuzla, Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina
ABSTRACT
Methods: There have been 784 coronary artery bypass
grafting (CABG) procedures performed at a new center for
treating cardiovascular disease in Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
and the surgical team has been fully trained in offpump
coronary artery bypass (OPCAB) surgery. All surgical
patients were considered for on-pump CABG (ONCAB) and
OPCAB surgical procedures. Minimally invasive direct coronary
artery bypass grafting and robotic procedures were done
as OPCAB. For multivessel median sternotomy cases, the
selection criteria were arbitrary (approximately 50% were
performed as ONCAB for perfusionist training). Patients
who were scheduled for and began their operations as
OPCAB but who were then placed on cardiopulmonary
bypass during the surgical procedure were counted as conversions.
The outcomes of converted patients were studied and
are the subject of this report.
Results: Of the 784 CABG procedures, 391 (49.6%) were
scheduled and performed as ONCAB operations; 357 (45.5%)
were performed as OPCAB; and 36 (9.2% of the originally
scheduled OPCAB patients or 4.6% of the total number of
CABG surgeries) were originally scheduled as OPCAB operations
but were converted to ONCAB. Reasons for conversions
were hemodynamic instability (21 patients), difficult
revision of grafts (8), ventricular fibrillation (5), and poor
native vessel (2). Outcomes of patients undergoing conversions
were analyzed with respect to the conversion cause.
When the cause of the conversion was mild-to-moderate
hemodynamic instability or difficult graft revision (n = 27),
no adverse ischemic effects were seen; however, when the
cause of conversion was severe hemodynamic instability, ventricular
fibrillation, or cardiac arrest (n = 9), 6 patients
(66.6%) had severe ischemic complications involving the central
nervous system or the myocardium.
Discussion: Myocardial ischemia must be monitored and
treated aggressively in OPCAB surgery. In patients with mild
hemodynamic instability, conversion did not adversely affect
outcome. In patients with severe hemodynamic compromise
and cardiac arrest, serious complications of cerebral and
myocardial ischemia were observed. The appropriate timing
of conversion is essential.
 Click
here for a PDF version of the full article. (Subscribers
Only)
|
 |