Limited evidence exists to guide the use of early parenteral anticoagulation following mechanical heart valve replacement (MVR). The purpose of this study was to compare the 30-day rates of thrombotic and bleeding complications for MVR patients receiving therapeutic versus prophylactic dose bridging regimens. In this retrospective cohort study we reviewed anticoagulation management and outcomes of all patients undergoing MVR at five Canadian hospitals between 2003 and 2010.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Radial artery vasospasm remains a potential cause of early graft failure after coronary bypass graft surgery, despite pretreatment with alpha-adrenergic or calcium channel blockers. We examined the roles of isoprostanes and prostanoid receptors selective for thromboxane A2 in the vasoconstriction of human radial arteries.
Methods: Human radial arterial segments were pretreated intraoperatively with verapamil/papaverine or nitroglycerine/phenoxybenzamine, or not treated.
Background: It is not known whether surgeons preferentially assign patients requiring fewer grafts (1 to 3) to off-pump coronary artery bypass graft surgery (OPCABG) and those requiring many grafts (4 to 7) to conventional on-pump coronary artery bypass graft surgery (ONCABG), nor whether risk-adjusted outcomes are similar for OPCABG and ONCABG among patients receiving 1 to 3 and 4 to 7 grafts.
Methods: Emory Hospitals' prospective database was retrospectively reviewed for 11,413 consecutive, isolated, primary coronary revascularization procedures between January 1997 and May 2005. Patients were divided into four groups: OPCABG 1 to 3 grafts (n = 3,187), OPCABG 4 to 7 grafts (n = 1,305), ONCABG 1 to 3 grafts (n = 3,279), and ONCABG 4 to 7 grafts (n = 3,642).
Curr Opin Cardiol
November 2006
Purpose Of Review: Off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting hopes to avoid morbidity associated with cardiopulmonary bypass, improving clinical outcomes. Yet its technical difficulty and unfamiliarity raise concern that adoption of off-pump coronary artery bypass might be associated with poorer outcomes. Both surgeon-specific and patient-related factors are believed to play roles in the success of off-pump coronary artery bypass.
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