Hemodynamic effect of myocardial revascularization in the impaired ventricle
- PMID: 7078239
Hemodynamic effect of myocardial revascularization in the impaired ventricle
Abstract
The hemodynamic effect of myocardial revascularization with saphenous vein grafts (mean 3.3 per patient) was analyzed 1 year after operation in 111 patients. Operations were performed using one continuous period of aortic cross-clamping with hyperkalemic cardioplegia for distal anastomoses in 84% of patients; 16% had arrest with topical and systemic hypothermia for myocardial protection. Group I (N = 18) had normal ventricles (ejection fraction [EF] greater than 50%; left ventricular end-diastolic pressure [LVEDP] less than or equal to 12 torr); Group II (N = 64) had ischemic ventricles (EF greater than 50%, LVEDP greater than 13 torr); and Group III (N = 30) had abnormal ventricles (EF less than 50%, LVEDP greater than 13 torr). Hemodynamic measurements were obtained before and 1 year after operation. Fifteen of 18 patients (83%) in Group I did not show significant hemodynamic changes, but in three EF decreased by greater than or equal to 10% and LVEDP increased by greater than 10% over preoperative levels. In Group II, EF was unchanged or slightly better in 89% (57/64) and worse in seven patients. Improvement in cardiac index (p less than 0.01) and LVEDP (p less than 0.001) was significant. Worsening of EF in 10 of 82 patients in Groups I and II was attributed to graft closure and/or poor myocardial protection. In Group III, significant improvement in cardiac index (p less than 0.001), EF (p less than 0.001), and LVEDP (p less than 0.01) was also noted. A subset of nine patients with EF less than or equal to 35% showed postoperative improvement in 56%. Of the remaining 20 patients with an EF of greater than 35% to less than 50%, half had greater than or equal to 20% improvement in postoperative EF. Operative mortality was 3.3% (1/30) for Group III. Late mortality was 1.5% (1/64) for Group II and 10% (3/29) for Group III. Significant improvement was noted postoperatively in 67% (57/85) of all patients who had preoperative treadmill tests (p less than 0.001). This study shows that myocardial revascularization significantly improved left ventricular performance in most patients with ischemic and abnormal ventricles. Previous studies that fail to show improvement may be related to incomplete revascularization and/or poor myocardial preservation. These data, therefore, justify the need for revascularization of the impaired ventricle.
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