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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 98, 691-702, Copyright © 1989 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
BS Allen, E Rosenkranz, GD Buckberg, H Davtyan, H Laks, J Tillisch and DC Drinkwater
Eighty consecutive patients receiving maximum inotropic and intraaortic
balloon support underwent emergency coronary artery bypass grafting 3.4 +/-
1 days (mean +/- standard error) after infarction for severe left
ventricular power failure (stroke work index less than 25 gm-m, left atrial
pressure greater than 20 mm Hg). All underwent induction of cardioplegia
with a 37 degrees C glutamate/aspartate blood cardioplegic solution,
multidose cold (4 degrees C) replenishment, and warm reperfusate. Viable
areas were grafted first to ensure cardioplegic distribution. Left
ventricular power failure was reversed in 94% of patients; 75 of 80
patients had discontinuation of inotropic drugs and intraaortic balloon
support. The early mortality rate (less than 30 days) was only 7% (3/45)
with early operation (less than 18 hours) and rose to 31% (11/35, p less
than 0.05) if operation was delayed more than 18 hours. Six of 14 early
deaths were due to progression of preoperative organ failure despite
reversal of shock. Eighteen of 66 early survivors died of end-stage heart
failure (21/80), a 26% late mortality rate. Nonsurvivors (early and late)
had a higher incidence of extending versus evolving infarction (33/64
versus 2/16, p less than 0.05), a longer delay from shock to operation
(11/45 versus 24/35, p less than 0.05), more preoperative organ failure
(9/9 versus 26/71, p less than 0.05), and a greater incidence of previous
infarction (22/43 versus 13/37, p greater than 0.05). Thirty of 45 late
survivors (67%) remain physically active. We conclude that left ventricular
power failure should be considered a medical/surgical emergency that
necessitates prompt angiography and can be reversed in selected patients.
Postoperative mortality (early and late) is due principally to delay of
operation leading to progression of preoperative organ failure or
progression of underlying cardiac disease if infarction becomes
established.
ARTICLES
Studies on prolonged acute regional ischemia. VI. Myocardial infarction with left ventricular power failure: a medical/surgical emergency requiring urgent revascularization with maximal protection of remote muscle
Department of Surgery, UCLA Medical Center 90024-1741.
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