Publications by authors named "Montiglio F"

Objective: We sought to examine the hemodynamic effects at 1 month and 1 year of left ventricular reconstruction by means of endoventricular patch plasty for patients with acute or chronic, very severe post-myocardial infarction heart failure who would have been systematically excluded from the Surgical Treatments for Ischemic Heart Failure (STICH) trial.

Methods: From 2002 to May 2008, 274 patients underwent left ventricular reconstruction for post-myocardial infarction scarring; 117 of these patients would not have been eligible for the STICH trial. The pertinent criteria for exclusion included 12 patients with no coronary vessel suitable for coronary artery bypass grafting; 17 patients within a month of myocardial infarction, including 11 with acute heart failure (8 septal ruptures and 3 cases of ventricular tachycardia); 48 patients receiving intravenous inotropes, intra-aortic balloon pumping, or both; 15 patients with bifocal or posterior scarring; 4 patients scheduled for heart transplantation; and 21 patients meeting 5 other exclusion criteria.

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The left ventricular reconstruction (LVR) with endoventricular circular patch plasty (EVCPP) was reported in 1984 as a surgical method to rebuild left ventricular aneurysm or asynergy after myocardial infarction. Scarred LV wall can be dyskinetic or akinetic according to the type of infarction (transmural or not), and the progressive dilatation of LV (remodeling) depends on the size of the asynergic scar. Assessment of this extension and of LV volume and performances, is easy and reliable by magnetic resonance (CMR).

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The first experience with endoventricular circular patch plasty (EVCPP) was reported in 1984 as a surgical method to rebuild left ventricular (LV) geometry made more spheric after myocardial infarction. The consequence is dilated ischemic cardiomyopathy. In anterior infarction, the free LV wall and septum are scarred and become dyskinetic or akinetic.

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Endoventricular patch plasty (EVPP) has been used since 1984 to rebuild the left ventricle. The global experience of our group includes more than 835 cases. Large wall-motion abnormalities were detected by the center line method when > 60% of the circumference of the left ventricle was asynergic.

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Since 1968, following Cooley's and Zubiate's group presentation, our team has been using extracorporeal circulation (ECC) with hemodilution without use of blood for priming of the circuit. Progressively this technique, that was only reserved to the Jehovah's Witnesses, became routine. Whereas in 1980, 30% of the patients operated by our group had not received any blood products during their stay in hospital, in the last few years, 1987-95, more than 80% of the patients could benefit from this technique.

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Background: Many believe that dyskinesia is the only predictor of favorable surgical outcome after large myocardial infarction and that akinetic scars do not recover well in patients with globally depressed ventricular function.

Methods: This study evaluates clinical and hemodynamic results of endoventricular circular patch plasty in patients with either large akinetic scar (n = 51) or large dyskinetic scar (n = 49) and depressed left ventricular function (ejection fraction <30%). Groups were comparable for symptoms, indication for operation, and delay from myocardial infarction.

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Most cases of left ventricular aneurysms undergo operation through resection of the exteriorized dyskinetic area with longitudinal suturing of the opening and this technique has been considered by cardiologists (Froehlich et al) to bring no improvement to the morphology and performance of the left ventricle. Some technical modifications have been adopted, such as the septal plicature (Cooley) or circular suturing of the opening (Jatene). Since 1984 our team has used an endoventricular patch, sutured over the contractile area and excluding the akinetic non-resectable scars, bringing a significant and calculable improvement to the left ventricular function.

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This study reports hemodynamic, electrophysiologic, and clinical results in 171 patients (157 men and 14 women, mean age 57 +/- 8 years) 1 year after endoventricular circular patch repair and coronary grafting for postinfarction left ventricular dyskinetic or akinetic aneurysm. All patients had hemodynamic and electrophysiologic study before the operation and early and 1 year after the operation. The vast majority of aneurysms were anterior (n = 166), with a mean delay from infarction of 43 +/- 50 months.

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To determine the efficacy of left ventricular (LV) aneurysm resection and endoventricular patch repair with septal exclusion in patients with severely depressed pump function, we retrospectively selected 62 patients (mean age 59 +/- 7 years) with preoperative LV ejection fraction < or = 20%, from a series of 322 patients with postinfarction LV aneurysm who underwent this type of surgery at our center during a 5-year period. Mean ejection fraction was 17 +/- 3%; all patients were in New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III/IV, and all had hemodynamic and electrophysiologic studies before and after surgery. We analyzed both operative and long-term survival, and hemodynamic, electrophysiologic, and angiographic variables, as well as the symptomatic state after surgery.

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Aneurysmectomy with left ventricular (LV) patch plasty reconstruction for anterior post-infarction LV aneurysm is usually followed by favourable haemodynamic results. The aim of this work was to describe the changes in LV shape induced by the intervention and to correlate them to the pre-operative data and to the surgical results. Twenty-two patients submitted to aneurysmectomy with this technique underwent a haemodynamic study before and 10-15 days after the intervention.

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We analyzed the effects of nonguided endocardiectomy in patients with ischemic ventricular arrhythmias who underwent reconstructive operations for postinfarction left ventricular aneurysm. A total of 106 patients among 287 consecutive patients had spontaneous or inducible ventricular tachycardia (49 spontaneous and 57 inducible). Cryotherapy was done in 67 patients and coronary revascularization was done in 98%.

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To assess the efficacy of left ventricular (LV) reconstruction after aneurysmectomy, 35 consecutive patients with anterior LV aneurysm were studied before and after surgery. Surgical technique was performed by applying a circular patch after aneurysmectomy to maintain a "more physiological" LV cavity. Myocardial revascularization was performed in all but 1 patient concurrently.

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Since 1984 the authors have developed a technical modification of left ventricular surgery after myocardial infarction. The principle is to reorganise the contractile muscle in a circumferential manner by excluding the fibrous akinetic parts of the interventricular septum. The operation consists of implanting sutures distally then resecting the exteriorized fibrous zones and finally mobilising the scarred endocardium in the zones inaccessible to resection (septum and the base of the anterior and posterior papillary muscles) up to the limits of the viable myocardium.

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Since 1984, we have used a circular patch to reconstruct the left ventricle ("endoventricular circular plasty") in order to maintain a more physiologic cavity. This technique has three theoretical advantages over standard linear closure of the left ventricle (LV). First, it allows exclusion of the septal akinetic segment of the LV.

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Coronary bypass was carried out in four patients who have received an intracoronary streptokinase infusion for acute myocardial infarction. Indications for emergency operation were a myocardial ischaemia time of less than 4 h and a slow flow in the reopened artery despite percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. Two patients were in cardiogenic shock treated by inotropic drugs and intra-aortic balloon pump.

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Twenty-two heterotopic heart transplantations were performed, in 19 of which the evolution of the recipient heart was estimated. Within the first postoperative hours the recipient heart was often more effective than the donor heart. The discrepant rhythm between the 2 hearts did not result in any pathological findings.

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Between November 1978 and March 1985, 27 cardiac transplant operations were performed at the Arnault Tzanck Institute; Barnard's heterotopic method was used in 21 cases. In 16 cases, follow-up was prolonged to assess the effects on the assisted receiving heart. In the first postoperative hours the receiving heart is often more effective than the graft.

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Having employed routinely the monitor of cerebral function in cardiac surgery operations for about a year, the authors now present an analysis of the variations in the traces of a group of 57 patients. They have found, when there is no major haemodynamic consequence associated with the induction of anaesthesia, and when there are no difficulties of a surgical or a technical nature accompanying the artificial extra-corporeal circulation, that the monitor curve stays perfectly stable. On the other hand, all sudden haemodynamic changes result in hypotension (haemorrhage, dysrhythmia, and a fall in flow in the extracorporeal circulation) that is reflected in the level of the monitor curve which also falls.

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