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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 71, 545-547, Copyright © 1976 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association


ARTICLES

Operative flow measurements and coronary bypass graft patency

JD Marco, HB Barner, GC Kaiser, JE Codd, JG Mudd and V Willman

Early (one week) and late (one year) postoperative angiography was performed in 142 patients having 310 grafts (117 right coronary artery [RCA], 134 left anterior descending [LAD], and 59 circumflex coronary artery [CCA]) to assess the factors responsible for failure of aorta- coronary artery saphenous vein grafts. Early catheterization revealed an 85.5 per cent patency rate with similar rates for each artery (RCA 88 per cent, LAD 85 per cent, and CCA 81 per cent). At one year 238 grafts remained patent, for a cumulative patency rate of 76.8 per cent with a similar distribution for each vessel (RCA 75 per cent, LAD 78 per cent, and CCA 76 per cent). Intraoperative flow measurements were correlated with early and late patency. Grafts with a basal flow less than 20 ml. per minute have a 42 per cent early closure rate and a 21 per cent late closure rate (cumulative 63 per cent). A basal flow of less than 40 ml. per minute was associated with a 25 per cent early failure and an 11 per cent late failure rate (cumulative 36 per cent). Basal flow at levels greater than 40 ml. per minute was not associated with an increased probability of graft closure. Absence of reactive hyperemia (30 second graft occlusion) was associated with a 19 per cent probability of early closure and a 31 per cent probability of cumulative thrombosis. A papaverine-induced flow increase (15 mg. given into the graft) of less than 100 per cent over basal flow gave a 20 per cent probability of early failure and 30 per cent probability of cumulative closure. Thus intraoperative basal flow measurements are of predictive value in determining the fate of aorta-coronary artery vein bypass grafts, and vasodilatory maneuvers provide little additional information.


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