Surgical management of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. Early and late results
Autor: | B, Heric, B W, Lytle, D P, Miller, E R, Rosenkranz, H M, Lever, D M, Cosgrove |
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Rok vydání: | 1995 |
Předmět: |
Aged
80 and over Male Reoperation Chi-Square Distribution Hemodynamics Amiodarone Cardiomyopathy Hypertrophic Middle Aged Survival Analysis Heart Block Postoperative Complications Treatment Outcome Risk Factors Heart Septum Humans Regression Analysis Female Coronary Artery Bypass Echocardiography Transesophageal Aged Follow-Up Studies |
Zdroj: | The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery. 110(1) |
ISSN: | 0022-5223 |
Popis: | From 1975 through 1993, 178 patients underwent surgical management of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. Operations included isolated septal myectomy (n = 95), septal myectomy and coronary artery bypass grafting (n = 41), septal myectomy plus a valve procedure (n = 25), septal myectomy, valve procedure, and coronary artery bypass grafting (n = 14), and mitral valve replacement without septal myectomy (n = 3). Recent myectomy results were monitored with transesophageal echocardiography. After initial myectomy, 32 patients (20%) underwent a second pump run for more extensive myectomy only (n = 22), mitral valve replacement only (n = 5), or both (n = 2). In-hospital mortality was 6% (n = 11) and 4% (n = 6) for patients undergoing septal myectomy or septal myectomy plus coronary artery bypass grafting, respectively. Heart block occurred in 17 patients (10%). Left ventricular outflow tract systolic gradients decreased from a mean of 93 mm Hg to 21 mm Hg after myectomy. Late survival was 86% and 70% at 5 and 10 postoperative years, respectively, and 93% and 79% for patients undergoing septal myectomy alone or septal myectomy plus coronary artery bypass grafting, respectively. Only 3 of 131 in-hospital survivors of septal myectomy or septal myectomy plus coronary artery bypass grafting died late cardiac deaths, for a yearly mortality of 0.6%. However, the 5-year late survival of patients undergoing valve operation plus septal myectomy was 51%, and multivariate testing confirmed the adverse influence on late survival (p = 0.008), as well as adverse influences of increasing age (p = 0.016) and return to cardiopulmonary bypass for mitral valve replacement (p = 0.038). At follow-up 136 patients (94%) had New York Heart Association class I or II symptoms. For patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy, septal myectomy alone or in combination with coronary artery bypass grafting produces effective symptom relief, excellent long-term survival, and a low risk of late cardiac death. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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