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Dr. Luc Tambeur Coronary artery bypass grafting CABG - OPCAB
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Coronary artery disease Definition: Narrowing of the coronary arteries Caused by thickening and loss of elasticity of the arterial walls Limiting blood flow to the myocardium Flow reserve (effort) At rest Occlusion
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Coronary artery disease Morphology and processes: Focal intimal accumulation of lipids, blood elements, fibrous tissue, calcium etc. with associated changes in the media → Plaque → Stenosis Regression of plaque and collateral formation Plaque rupture and thrombosis Usually affects multiple coronaries simultaneously, proximally and at bifurcations
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Myocardial infarction Imbalance between oxygen supply and demand Myocardial necrosis starts after 20 minutes Border zone Reperfusion within 3-4 hours can limit the extent of myocardial necrosis Scarring. LV systolic and diastolic dysfunction. Chronic heart failure.
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Diagnosis Symptoms: Angina pectoris, acute myocardial infarction, chronic heart failure, sudden death, incidental finding on ECG Noninvasive tests to identify and quantify CAD and sequelae: ECG, CXR, Labs, Exercise testing, Nuclear scans, Echocardiography, CT (Ca ++ )
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Diagnosis Associated conditions Atherosclerosis: carotids, PAD Definitive diagnosis: extent, distribution and severity of anatomic coronary artery disease Coronary angiography New modalities: CT (MRI)
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Coronary angiography Grading of stenoses: Moderate: 50% diameter = 75% cross- sectional area loss Severe: 67% diameter = 90% cross- sectional area loss Distribution: Single system / two system / three system Left main
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Coronary anatomy
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Indications for surgery Comparative benefit of surgery relative to no treatment / medical treatment / PCI Enormous variability in CAD, impacting on risk calculation → patient-specific predictions General indications: Left main or left main equivalent 3 system disease 2 system disease with severe prox. LAD and LVEF < 50% or ischemia on non-invasive testing 1 or 2 system disease with large area of viable myocardium and high-risk criteria
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Bypass grafting Full sternotomy and CPB (HLM): CABG Full sternotomy, no CPB: OPCAB Small sternotomy, parasternal access, thoracotomy, with or without CPB: e.g. MIDCAB
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Bypass grafting CABG = Golden standard and still most widely used (STS database ± 80%) Objective: complete revascularisation by bypassing all severe stenoses in all affected coronary branches with ≥ 1-1.5 mm diameter Most widely used conduits: LIMA, RIMA, SVG, radial artery, gastro-epiploic artery
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Conduits LIMA / RIMA
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Conduits SVG
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Conduits Radial
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Conduits Gastro-epiploic
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Conduit configurations
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Endarter- ectomy
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CABG Median sternotomy Conduit harvesting Heparin, cannulation and CPB with mild to moderate hypothermia Cross-clamping of the aorta and cardioplegia Distal anastomoses. Rewarming started. Cross-clamp removed. Proximal anast. using a partially occluding clamp. Clamp removed. De-airing. CPB discontinued, cannulae removed, protamine. Pacing wires, drainage tubes, hemostasis and closure.
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CABG
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OPCAB Attempt to maintain normothermia Median sternotomy Conduit harvesting Heparin. Pacing wires. Maneuvers to maintain hemodynamic stability (Trendelenburg, table, R pleura,.) Pericardial sling Luxation. Stabilisation. Distal anastomoses with or without shunting. Proximal anastomoses. Protamine. Chest drains. Hemostasis. Closure.
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Not discussed IABP and other support devices Emergency surgery Redo surgery Other modalities of bypass grafting: MIDCAB, robotic surgery, … Adjunctive surgical treatment: TMLR, growth factors, cell transplantation Combined surgery
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Results Early mortality can be predicted, using risk stratification models (Euroscore, STS) Time-Related Survival, generally: 1 month: 98% 1 year: 97% 5 year: 92% 10 year: 81% 15 year: 66% NB: ± 25% of early and late deaths are not related to CAD or CABG
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Time-Related Survival
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Results Freedom from angina: 60% at 10 years Freedom from AMI: 86% at 10 years Freedom from sudden death: 97% at 10 years 80% of patients are working 1 year postop. Graft patency: LIMA (to LAD) ± 90% at 10 and 20 years. Radial artery ± 80% at 7 years Gastro-epiploic artery ± 60% at 10 years SVG ± 50-60% at 10 years, 80% to LAD
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