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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 94, 124-131, Copyright © 1987 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
W Flameng, P Sergeant, J Vanhaecke and R Suy
Emergency aorta-coronary bypass grafting was performed early in the course
of evolving myocardial infarction in 48 patients. The time interval between
the onset of symptoms and reperfusion was 169 +/- 80 minutes. Quantitative
assessment of postoperative thallium 201 myocardial scans in 19 patients
revealed a significant salvage of myocardium after surgical reperfusion:
The size of the residual infarction was less than 50% of that in a matched,
medically treated, prospective control group (n = 39) (p less than 0.05).
Postoperative equilibrium-gated radionuclide blood pool studies (technetium
99m) showed an enhanced recovery of regional and global ejection fraction
after operation as compared to after medical treatment (p less than 0.05).
Ultrastructural evaluation of biopsy specimens obtained during the
operation delineated subendocardial necrosis in the majority of cases
(72%), but subepicardial necrosis was found in only 6% of instances. Q-wave
abnormalities were observed on the postoperative electrocardiogram in 50%
of cases. Operative mortality was 0% in low- risk patients (i.e.,
hemodynamically stable condition, n = 26) and 18% in high-risk patients
(i.e., cardiogenic shock including total electromechanical dysfunction, n =
22). Survival rate at 18 months was 92% +/- 4%, and 95% +/- 4% of the
survivors were event free. It is concluded that early surgical reperfusion
of evolving myocardial infarction limits infarct size significantly,
enhances functional recovery, and may be a lifesaving operation in patients
having cardiogenic shock associated with unsuccessful resuscitation.
ARTICLES
Emergency coronary bypass grafting for evolving myocardial infarction. Effects on infarct size and left ventricular function
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