Objective: Human immunodeficiency virus infection (HIV+) is associated with a 2-fold increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Increasingly, patients who are HIV + are being evaluated to undergo cardiac surgery. Current risk-adjusted scoring systems, including the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Predicted Risk of Mortality score, fail to stratify HIV + risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Intracoronary stents are being used to treat acute and threatened closure after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty and to prevent restenosis.
Methods: The outcomes of 68 patients having coronary artery bypass grafting after stent placement were reviewed. The mean age was 60.
From 1967 to 1993, 21 patients underwent surgical repair of aortic left ventricular discontinuity as a result of acute bacterial endocarditis. Repair of the defect between the aorta and left ventricle was usually with interposition of a patch (prosthetic patch or autologous pericardium), using a continuous monofilament suture. Interrupted pledgetted stitches were used when the ventricular tissue appeared friable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ability of pedicled omental flaps to revascularize isolated jejunal segments was determined in the initial phase of this project. These bowel segments were capable of surviving independent of their mesenteric perfusion, and absorptive function was equal to that of controls as measured by D-xylose assays. In the second phase of this research, we studied in 10 dogs the absorptive capacity of isolated jejunal segments with both an intact mesentery and an omental flap sutured to the antimesenteric border compared with controls that were perfused only by the mesentery.
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