• Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss · Feb 1999

    [Evaluation of a clinical and scintigraphic management strategy for cardiac risk before abdominal aorta surgery. Apropos of 982 surgical patients].

    • G Vanzetto, C Sessa, J L Magne, H Guidicelli, O Ormezzano, D Fagret, D Blin, F Gattaz, and J Machecourt.
    • Services de cardiologie, CHU de Grenoble.
    • Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss. 1999 Feb 1;92(2):211-8.

    AbstractThe incidence of major cardiac events (death, infarction) is over 5% after programmed aortic vascular surgery. The aim of this study was to evaluate a management strategy of this risk based on the clinical status and targeted indication of myocardial scintigraphy, coronary angiography and myocardial revascularisation. A first phase (1991-1993, 451 patients) confirmed the prognostic value of clinical (age, previous cardiac history, diabetes, hypertension, electrocardiogrammes) and scintigraphic features: the cardiac mortality was 1.25% in patients with a low clinical risk (70.3% of cases) and 4.5% in patients with a high clinical risk (2 factors, 29.3% of cases) (p < 0.01). In the latter group, the mortality was zero after normal myocardial scintigraphy and 7.2% after abnormal myocardial scintigraphy (p < 0.01) and 12.5% in cases with reversible defects (p < 0.01). During the second phase of the study (1994-1997, 531 patients) coronary angiography was performed in patients with a high clinical risk and abnormal scintigraphy (10.9% of cases). This led to a myocardial revascularisation in 3.6% of patients. The cardiac mortality was then the same in the low and high a priori clinical risk: 2.3 and 2.8% (NS). The use of simple clinical criteria enables surgery in the majority of candidates for aortic vascular surgery, scintigraphy being reserved for about one patient in ten with myocardial revascularisation in less than 4% of cases. The operative cardiac mortality then decreases to under 2.5%.

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