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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 81, 423-427, Copyright © 1981 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
DW Miller Jr, TD Ivey, WW Bailey, DD Johnson and EA Hessel
We obtained information from 677 cardiac surgeons in the United States on
the type of practice, case load, and techniques currently used for coronary
bypass operations. These surgeons collectively performed 93,000 bypass
operations in 1979. Less than 25% of these procedures were done in
university or federal hospitals; the majority were performed in the private
sector by surgeons engaged in a single specialty group practice. The mean
case load in 1979 was 137 operations per surgeon, and only 46 (6.8%) did
fewer than 25 bypass operations during that year. These surgeons devote a
relatively small percentage of their professional activity to other areas
in thoracic surgery--the majority do not perform congenital heart surgery
and two thirds devote less than 10% of their professional activity to
general thoracic surgery. Compared with our previous national survey done
in 1975, techniques used for bypass grafting have changed considerably over
the past 5 years. An increasing number of surgeons conduct cardiopulmonary
bypass with an arterial input line introduced into the ascending aorta and
with a single cannula for venous drainage and do not routinely vent the
left ventricle. Cold chemical cardioplegia has become the technique of
choice (by 91% of surgeons) for myocardial protection, sequential bypass
grafts are now widely employed, and 83.2% of surgeons perform all distal
anastomoses during a single period of cardioplegic arrest.
ARTICLES
The practice of coronary artery bypass surgery in 1980
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