• J Card Surg · Jan 2015

    Guide to performing cardiac surgery in patients with hereditary bleeding disorders.

    • Prachi Bhave, David McGiffin, James Shaw, Megan Walsh, Penny McCarthy, Huyen Tran, and Amanda Katherine Davis.
    • Ronald Sawers Haemophilia Centre, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
    • J Card Surg. 2015 Jan 1; 30 (1): 61-9.

    Background And AimThis study presents the experience of a large Australian hospital in performing cardiac surgery on patients with hereditary bleeding disorders (HBDs) and provides a suggested approach for their perioperative management.MethodsMedical records of patients with HBDs who underwent cardiac surgery from January 1997 to December 2013 were reviewed.ResultsSeventeen patients were included in this study, 13 with Hemophilia A, one symptomatic Hemophilia A carrier, one with Hemophilia B, and two with von Willebrand Disease. Cardiac surgical procedures performed included 10 coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) operations, two aortic valve replacements, two mitral valve repairs, two aortic root replacements, and one combined aortic valve replacement and CABG. Perioperative management centered on factor substitution to maintain normal factor levels. Perioperative outcomes including length of hospital stay, mortality, and return to the operating room for bleeding were recorded. Two patients returned to the operating room for bleeding, one patient on the first postoperative day and one patient at day 20 postoperatively with pericardial bleeding.ConclusionsMost patients demonstrated excellent hemostasis, suggesting that cardiopulmonary bypass surgery in HBD patients may be safely performed with careful planning.© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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