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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 96, 72-80, Copyright © 1988 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
KR Kanter, SA Ruzevich, DG Pennington, LR McBride, MT Swartz and VL Willman
Improvements in mechanical support for profound circulatory collapse have
resulted in increasing survival of these critically ill patients. Since
1980, 27 patients aged 3 days to 69 years (mean 34.9 years) who required
mechanical circulatory assistance have been followed up after discharge
from the hospital. The refractory cardiogenic shock necessitating
mechanical support occurred postoperatively in 22 patients (coronary artery
bypass in nine, valve replacement in four, correction of congenital heart
defects in nine) and with end-stage cardiomyopathy in five. Fourteen
patients were supported with a Pierce- Donachy ventricular assist device
(left ventricular assist in seven, right ventricular assist in three, both
in four); nine were supported with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, two
with a Medtronic centrifugal left ventricular assist pump, one with
biventricular Biomedicus pumps, and one with a Novacor left ventricular
assist system. The duration of support ranged from 8 hours to 91 days with
a mean of 3.5 days in patients supported for postoperative shock. Major
complications occurred in 18 patients (67%), including bleeding that
necessitated operative exploration in 14, serious infection in five, renal
failure in two, and stroke in two. The five patients with cardiomyopathy
underwent cardiac transplantation. The remaining 22 patients who had
postoperative cardiogenic shock were weaned from support. There have been
four late deaths: two cardiac related at 6 months and two of cancer at 46
and 53 months (one patient was in New York Heart Association class I and
the other in class II before death). The remaining 23 survivors have been
followed up for 3 to 79 months (mean 29 months) and at last examination 17
(74%) were in class I, two (9%) were in class II, three (13%) were in class
III, and one (4%) was in class IV. Eight patients are employed full time,
three are retired, four attend school, three are in preschool, one is a
housewife, and one is unemployed but free of symptoms. Only four patients
have significant cardiac disability, and one of these still works. In
conclusion, mechanical circulatory assistance allows adequate support to
permit satisfactory long-term survival in patients with refractory
cardiogenic shock.
ARTICLES
Follow-up of survivors of mechanical circulatory support
Department of Surgery, St. Louis University Medical Center, Mo.
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