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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 98, 922-927, Copyright © 1989 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association


ARTICLES

Heart-lung transplantation: the initial Arizona experience

B Rhenman, MJ Rhenman, TB Icenogle, MA Vasu, GK Sethi, LJ Rosado, R Williams and J Copeland
Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, University of Arizona, Tucson 85724.

Since November 1985, cardiopulmonary transplantation has been performed at the University of Arizona heart transplant program. Seven patients, five women and two men, have undergone heart-lung transplantation. Five patients had primary pulmonary hypertension, and two patients had Eisenmenger's complex. The mean age was 31 years (range, 17 to 43 years). Average follow-up was 15 months (range, 3 to 34 months), with a total of 115 patient-months. There have been no operative or late deaths. Immunosuppression consisted of rabbit antithymocyte globulin, cyclosporine (Cyclosporin A), azathioprine, methylprednisolone, and prednisone. Our first five patients were aggressively diagnosed and treated for rejection by endomyocardial biopsy, with each patient having one or several treatments for acute rejection. These five patients had one or several episodes of severe infection, particularly cytomegalovirus. In our last two patients we omitted routine heart biopsies. Only those rejection episodes diagnosed by chest x-ray films are considered significant. Our last two patients have not been treated for acute rejection and have had no infections. Presently our immunologic surveillance consists only of careful clinical examination and frequent chest x-ray films. Any changes in the patient's condition are aggressively investigated, searching for infection or rejection. Two patients have been used as domino donors of their native heart.


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