Cardiac and pulmonary artery emboli are lethal complications following vertebroplasty. Clinicians should recognise these fatal complications immediately and surgical extraction is mandatory and provides the best outcome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Vasodilator strategies used to treat bypass grafts in the operating theatre, such as nitrates, phosphodiesterase inhibitors and calcium channel antagonists have a broad but short-lived effect against a variety of vasoconstrictor stimuli. Treatments that react irreversibly with proteins modulating vasoconstriction have the advantage that their effects can last well into the postoperative period. In addition systemic effects are avoided as the treatment is localised to the treated graft.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInteract Cardiovasc Thorac Surg
October 2008
Phenoxybenzamine, an irreversible alpha-adrenoceptor antagonist, is used as a topical treatment against catecholamine-induced contraction in radial artery bypass grafts. Published data suggest that a wide range of phenoxybenzamine doses may be equally effective. This study aimed to investigate whether lower doses of phenoxybenzamine would benefit grafts by better preserving endothelium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiadenosine polyphosphates (Ap(n)A) are released by degranulating platelets and high, local concentrations may form at sites of platelet activation. Radial artery grafts, now often used alongside the internal mammary artery in coronary artery bypass surgery, are particularly reactive to several vasoconstrictors but the response to Ap(n)A has not been investigated. This study compared the vasoconstrictor activity of Ap(n)A in human radial artery with other vessels commonly used as bypass grafts.
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