F. Benetti et al., VIDEO-ASSISTED MINIMALLY INVASIVE CORONARY OPERATIONS WITHOUT CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS - A MULTICENTER STUDY, Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery, 112(6), 1996, pp. 1478-1484
Objective: The need to avoid the risks associated with cardiopulmonary
bypass has led to the interest in coronary operations without cardiop
ulmonary bypass, Patients and methods: From April 1994 to September 19
95, 44 patients (mean age 63.3 +/- 10.0 years, range 43 to 83 years) w
ere selected for video-assisted coronary artery bypass grafting withou
t cardiopulmonary bypass through a small anterior thoracotomy, Mean pr
eoperative ejection fraction was 50.7% +/- 13.4% (range 20% to 65%). F
our patients had left ventricular dysfunction (ejection fraction below
35%), Thirty patients had stable angina (26 with class 3 angina) and
14 had unstable angina, One had recurrent angina (redo), In all cases
a small (3.5 to 11 cm) anterior thoracotomy (43 left and one right) wa
s performed and the harvesting of the left internal thoracic artery wa
s video-assisted by thoracoscopy, Results: The left internal thoracic
artery was used in 43 cases to graft the left anterior descending coro
nary artery; the right thoracic mammary was used in one case to graft
the right coronary artery; the radial artery was used in one case to p
erform a T-graft to the first diagonal and first marginal branches, We
recorded one death (2.3%) and one case of postoperative low cardiac o
utput syndrome (2.3%), Perioperative myocardial infarction occurred in
two cases (4.5%), We did not record noncardiac complications (cerebro
vascular complications, kidney failure, prolonged ventilatory support,
or wound complications), Supraventricular and ventricular arrhythmias
were never detected, Conclusion: According to our experience, video-a
ssisted coronary bypass through a small anterior thoracotomy is a new
promising technique that can be considered an alternative in most case
s to angioplasty and complementary to conventional coronary operations
.