Seminars in thoracic and cardiovascular surgery
-
Since its first description, acute respiratory distress syndrome has been characterized by abnormal physiologic and gas exchange properties of the lungs. Many adjunctive therapies have been developed to reduce the stresses of mechanical ventilation on already damaged lungs. We examined the mechanism of action and the latest clinical trial information of several adjunctive therapies including prone positioning, nitric oxide, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, arterial venous carbon dioxide removal, and liquid ventilation. While all of these therapies have demonstrated short-term improvements in arterial blood gases and in the limitation of lung injury, none have shown an evidence-based survival benefit.
-
Surgical mitral valve repair is the procedure of choice to treat mitral regurgitation of all etiologies. Whereas annuloplasty is the cornerstone of mitral valve repair, a variety of other surgical techniques are utilized to correct dysfunction of the leaflets and subvalvular apparatus; in most cases, surgical repair entails application of multiple repair techniques in each patient. ⋯ Specifically, there has been great progress in the development of novel technology to facilitate percutaneous annuloplasty and percutaneous edge-to-edge repair. The objectives of this report were to (1) discuss the surgical foundations for these percutaneous approaches; (2) review device design and experimental and clinical results of percutaneous valve repair; and (3) address future directions, including the key challenges of patient selection and clinical trial design.
-
Semin. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Jan 2006
ReviewAchieving tight glycemic control in the operating room: lessons learned from 12 years in the trenches of a paradigm shift in anesthetic care.
Intensive insulin therapy to control perioperative hyperglycemia has become the new standard of care for cardiac surgery patients. Although there are several published protocols for achieving tight glycemic control in the postoperative period, there are no such published protocols or even suggested methods for intraoperative control. At Providence St. ⋯ All four have evolved in the hands of experienced cardiac anesthesiologists. Each of these anesthesiologists was faced with the daily task of individualizing patient therapy with the common goal of eliminating intraoperative hyperglycemia. In this article we will describe each of these four generalized methodologies to give the practicing anesthesiologist a starting point from which they can develop and hone their own technique further.
-
Semin. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Jan 2006
ReviewSupportive care in acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Although the central focus of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is the pathology within the lung, ARDS is very much a systemic disease. As such, the whole body needs care and support while the disease process within the lung runs its course. The issues of pain management, sedation, fluid balance, nutrition, metabolic and hormonal processes, infection control, and patient positioning are important for any patient in a critical care setting. For patients with ARDS, the required ventilatory support and ARDS-associated systemic inflammation mandate the above supportive measures.
-
Semin. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Jan 2006
ReviewEvaluation of patients for pulmonary endarterectomy.
Chronic thromboembolic obstruction of the pulmonary vascular bed has been increasingly recognized as a treatable form of pulmonary hypertension, with surgery referred to as a pulmonary endarterectomy. Careful evaluation of patients with pulmonary hypertension and proper selection of those with surgically accessible, chronic thromboembolic disease are critical determinants for a successful outcome from this operation. This article describes the clinical presentation, appropriate evaluation, and an approach to surgical selection for patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension.