Background: The standard approach in treating cardiac myxoma is the median full sternotomy. With the evolution of surgical techniques, the right minithoracotomy approach has emerged as an alternative method. Since few studies have been published assessing the right minithoracotomy approach, we performed a retrospective study to compare the clinical outcomes of the right minithoracotomy approach with those of the sternotomy approach.
Methods: From January 2005 to December 2014, 203 patients underwent resection of a cardiac myxoma. Patients with preexisting cardiac problems were excluded from this study. 146 patients were enrolled in this study; 83 patients were treated using a median sternotomy and 63 patients were treated using a right minithoracotomy.
Results: No early mortalities were recorded in either group. Although the cardiopulmonary bypass time and aorta cross-clamp time were significantly shorter in the sternotomy group (p<0.001 and p=0.005), postoperative blood transfusions and arrhythmia events were significantly less common in the thoracotomy group (p=0.004 and p=0.025, respectively). No significant differences were found in the duration of the hospital stay, postoperative intubation time, the duration of the intensive care unit stay, and recurrence.
Conclusion: The minimally invasive right minithoracotomy approach is a good alternative method for treating cardiac myxoma because it was found to be associated with a lower incidence of postoperative complications and a shorter postoperative recovery period.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5090/kjtcs.2016.49.5.356 | DOI Listing |
J Extra Corpor Technol
December 2024
Department of Clinical Engineering, Kitaharima Medical Center, 926-250, Ichiba-cho, Ono-shi, Hyogo, 675-1392, Japan.
We conducted a high-risk redo mitral valve replacement through a right mini-thoracotomy without rib spreading (redo-MICS MVR) under systemic hyperkalemia combined with circulatory arrest to circumvent complications associated with cardioplegia delivery. The patient, a 75-year-old man, had a predicted mortality rate of 20%. Initial antegrade cardioplegia successfully induced cardiac arrest, which was administered every 30 min.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJTCVS Tech
December 2024
Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Memorial Ankara Hospital, Ankara, Turkey.
Objectives: Minimally invasive approach to cardiac surgery has been steadily developing and increasingly being performed since the early 1990s. We aimed to present our initial clinical experience and show the feasibility and safety of the right anterior minithoracotomy (RAT) approach for ascending aorta surgery with or without aortic valve involvement.
Methods: This single-center study included 112 patients who underwent ascending aortic replacement with or without aortic valve intervention, between September 2018 and March 2024.
Khirurgiia (Mosk)
December 2024
Petrovsky National Research Center of Surgery, Moscow, Russia.
Objective: To evaluate long-term clinical efficacy of MICS CABG compared to surgery through sternotomy.
Material And Methods: The study included 158 patients who underwent minimally invasive CABG through left-sided mini-thoracotomy between 2017 and 2023. The primary endpoints were in-hospital mortality and 5-year survival, secondary endpoint - freedom from adverse cardiac events.
Objective: To evaluate the immediate outcomes and safety of simultaneous Maze procedure in patients with isolated and multivalvular heart disease via right-sided mini-thoracotomy.
Material And Methods: A retrospective analysis of postoperative outcomes included 21 patients with various valvular heart diseases and atrial septal defects with atrial fibrillation. All patients underwent heart valve surgery with cryoablation (left atrial, right atrial or biatrial «Maze» approach) via right-sided mini-thoracotomy.
Eur Heart J Case Rep
December 2024
Division of Congenital and Structural Cardiology, UZ Leuven, Herestraat 49, 3000 Leuven, Belgium.
Background: Atrial switch repair was the first surgical intervention to result in long-term survival in patients with ventriculo-arterial discordance or transposition of the great arteries. However, the natural history after atrial switch is not uneventful with frequent atrial arrhythmia, development of baffle stenosis, and eventually heart failure. For this, new interventions might be necessary but are often associated with increased risk.
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