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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 101, 1069-1075, Copyright © 1991 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
RK Bottner, RB Wallace, MS Visner, KS Stark, E Recientes, NM Katz, RA Hopkins, GA Patrissi and KM Kent
Emergency coronary artery bypass grafting is necessary in 2.7% to 13.5% of
patients undergoing elective percutaneous transluminal coronary
angioplasty. Myocardial infarction develops in 11% to 49% of these
patients, with 18% to 46% of infarcts resulting in new Q waves. Since
February 1987 a revised protocol for myocardial preservation has been used
in 19 patients undergoing emergency bypass grafting for failed angioplasty.
Cardioplegia is induced with a normothermic blood cardioplegic solution.
Multiple maintenance doses of cold (4 degrees C) blood cardioplegic
solution are then delivered through the aortic root and vein grafts. Before
the aortic crossclamp is removed, normothermic reperfusion cardioplegic
solution is delivered through the aortic root and vein grafts. This group
was compared with all patients undergoing emergency bypass grafting for
failed angioplasty before February 1987. These 45 patients received cold
induction of cardioplegic solution, multiple maintenance doses of cold
cardioplegic solution, and no reperfusion cardioplegic solution. The
prevalence of myocardial infarction in the group receiving cold
cardioplegic solution was 65% versus 26% in the group receiving
normothermic cardioplegic solution (p less than 0.007). Multivariate
analysis identified the use of the normothermic cardioplegia protocol (p
less than 0.005), nontotal occlusion of the angioplasty vessel (p less than
0.03), and presence of collateral flow to the angioplasty vessel (p less
than 0.04) as being independently associated with absence of myocardial
infarction.
ARTICLES
Reduction of myocardial infarction after emergency coronary artery bypass grafting for failed coronary angioplasty with use of a normothermic reperfusion cardioplegia protocol
Department of Medicine, Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, D.C.
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