European journal of cardio-thoracic surgery : official journal of the European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
-
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Aug 2006
Case ReportsUndiagnosed coronary fistula causing low cardiac output syndrome after pediatric heart surgery.
A patient with preoperative pulmonary hypertension and a large left to right intracardiac shunt underwent surgical correction of a complex cardiac anomaly and required extracorporeal life support for unexplained ventricular dysfunction following the procedure. Following recovery, a fistulous connection between the right coronary artery and main pulmonary artery was demonstrated. Implications and management strategies of unsuspected coronary fistula in pediatric heart surgery are discussed.
-
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Aug 2006
Does bilateral ITA grafting increase perioperative complications? Outcome of 4462 patients with bilateral versus 4204 patients with single ITA bypass.
Superior patency of internal thoracic artery (ITA) grafting to saphenous veins is conclusive. The aim of the present study was to compare the early outcome of patients receiving either bilateral ITA (BITA) or single ITA (SITA) grafts and to identify risk factors for perioperative complications, such as obesity, diabetes mellitus, or advanced age. ⋯ CABG using both ITAs can be performed routinely with good clinical results and low mortality. Compared with single ITA grafting, sternal and bleeding complications were slightly increased. Diabetes mellitus, BITA grafting, duration of surgery but not obesity or COPD could be identified as independent risk factors for sternal complications. Dialysis-dependent renal failure, EF<30%, emergent cases, and the absence of BITA grafting were predictors for increased perioperative mortality.
-
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jul 2006
Patient-prosthesis mismatch does not affect survival following aortic valve replacement.
Patient-prosthesis mismatch (PPM) has been reported to increase perioperative mortality and reduce postoperative survival in patients undergoing aortic valve replacement (AVR). We analysed the effect of PPM at values predicting severe mismatch on survival following AVR in our unit. ⋯ Severe patient-prosthesis mismatch was predicted in 4-10% of patients undergoing AVR but this did not affect in-hospital mortality or mid-term survival.
-
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · Jul 2006
Hyporesponsiveness of T cell subsets after cardiac surgery: a product of altered cell function or merely a result of absolute cell count changes in peripheral blood?
The activity of the specific immune system and especially the function of T helper (TH) cells are reduced after cardiac surgery. This decrease is followed by an increase in TH2 cell activity and a delayed recovery of TH1 cell function (TH1/TH2 shift). Neither the underlying cause nor the relationship between the absolute numbers of T lymphocyte subpopulations, the state of activation of these cells and cytokine synthesis in cell culture has been clarified. We conducted a prospective study in order to test the hypothesis that the decrease in specific immunity is not caused by dilution effects but by functional alterations in T cell subsets. ⋯ The number of immune cells of the specific and the non-specific immune system is not reduced in the immediate postoperative period. Haemodilution thus has no detectable effect on immune function at this time point. Beginning on d1, the function of specific immune cells, especially TH lymphocytes, is severely suppressed. This functional alteration appears not to be preceded by T cell activation during CPB. Although TH cell activity begins to increase on d1, cytokine synthesis is reduced. When cytokine synthesis is corrected to the absolute number of TH cells in culture, there is strong evidence for an increase in TH2 cell activity. On the whole, these results corroborate the hypothesis of a TH1/TH2 shift that is primarily caused by an alteration of TH1 function. Neither haemodilution nor a preceding activation plays a major role.