There is a large population of patients in end-stage congestive heart failure who cannot be treated by means of conventional cardiac surgery, cardiac transplantation, or chronic catecholamine infusions. In 2 such patients, we provided permanent left ventricular assistance on an outpatient basis by surgically implanting a modified intra-aortic balloon pump. A Dacron-velour graft to the common iliac artery served as a covering for the extravascular portion of the balloon's pneumatic tubing, which was stabilized by routing it through the iliac crest. The tubing was then carried ventrally to exit through a stoma just above the inguinal ligament. Before hospital discharge, each patient underwent a 5-day regimen of alternate pumping and ambulation. The patient was then permitted to go home, but returned daily as an outpatient in accordance with individual need, for approximately 6 hours of hemodynamic support. The 1st patient lived 3 months after pump insertion, and the 2nd patient for 38 days. Although the 1st patient developed a fever of unknown origin that prompted us to remove the intra-aortic balloon pump unnecessarily, there was no evidence of infection upon surgical exploration and subsequent tissue culturing; she died, rather, of intractable ventricular fibrillation, apparently consequent to her 36-hour loss of hemodynamic support. The 2nd patient also died of a cause unrelated to the presence of the pump, and on autopsy showed good evidence of healing and absence of infection. On the evidence of this pilot study, we conclude that intermittent left ventricular assistance, through periodic activation of a permanently implanted intra-aortic balloon pump during outpatient visits, warrants further study as an alternative for selected patients with end-stage heart disease, when medical and other surgical options have been exhausted.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC326537 | PMC |
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