Seminars in thoracic and cardiovascular surgery
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Semin. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Jan 2018
Randomized Controlled TrialRemote Ischemic Preconditioning in High-risk Cardiovascular Surgery Patients: A Randomized-controlled Trial.
Remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) may reduce biomarkers of ischemic injury after cardiovascular surgery. However, it is unclear whether RIPC has a positive impact on clinical outcomes. We performed a blinded, randomized controlled trial to determine if RIPC resulted in fewer adverse clinical outcomes after cardiac or vascular surgery. ⋯ There were no differences in the composite outcome between the 2 groups (RIPC: 67 [32%] and control: 72 [34%], relative risk [0.94 {0.72-1.24}]) or in any of the individual components that made up the composite outcome. Additionally, we did not observe any differences between the groups in troponin-I values, the length of intensive care unit stay, or the total hospital stay. RIPC did not have a beneficial effect on clinical outcomes in patients who had cardiovascular surgery.
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Semin. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Jan 2018
Is Surgical or Catheter-based Interventions an Option After an Unsuccessful Mitral Clip?
The objective of this study was to assess the results of catheter-based and surgical reinterventions in primary mitral regurgitation after failed MitraClip therapy. We report on 21 consecutive symptomatic patients with primary mitral regurgitation (median age 78 years) who underwent either repeat MitraClip therapy (n = 7) or mitral valve surgery (n = 14) after failure of the index procedure with 1-2 MitraClip implantations. At the time of reinterventions, 193 (interquartile range [IQR]: 32-622) days after the index procedure, patients had recurrent or persistent grade 3 mitral regurgitation. ⋯ Recurrence of significant mitral regurgitation was absent in all but 1 patient with unsuccessful repeat MitraClip therapy who was deemed inoperable. Our data show that both repeat MitraClip and also mitral valve surgery are feasible and safe alternatives in patients without an excessively increased perioperative risk. We conclude that whenever leaflet insertion is not compromised, repeat catheter-based repair is a reasonable redo concept; in the remaining cases, surgery should be offered to the patient.
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Semin. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Jan 2018
Onset and Evolution of Clinically Apparent Myasthenia Gravis After Resection of Non-myasthenic Thymomas.
Patients with thymoma and without clinical or electromyographical myasthenic signs may occasionally develop myasthenia several years after thymectomy. Hereby, we investigated the predictors and the evolution of this peculiar disease. We performed a retrospective analysis in 104 consecutive patients who underwent thymectomy between 1987 and 2013 for thymoma without clinical or electromyographic signs of myasthenia gravis. ⋯ No patient under medical treatment has yet developed a complete remission. In our study the presence of preoperative high-level serum acetylcholine receptor antibodies was the only factor significantly associated with the development of post-thymectomy myasthenia gravis. The persistence of residual islet of ectopic thymic tissue was one of the causes of the onset of myasthenia and its surgical removal was successful.