The feasibility and safety of outpatient coronary angiography were studied in 2,106 patients. Patients were discharged with a pressure dressing 2 h after the angiographic study. No complications occurred in 99.53% of all patients. Severe complications were seen in 10 patients (0.47%). 9 patients (0.43%) had to be admitted to hospital, either for immediate treatment (4 patients) or due to complications (5 patients). Our results revealed a very low complication rate for outpatient coronary angiography. The number and severity of complications following coronary angiography did not differ significantly between inpatients and outpatients. Therefore, outpatient coronary angiography can be considered as a safe and feasible diagnostic method which may help cut health care costs.
Coronary catheter revascularisation is less costly than bypass surgery due to lower direct (medical) and indirect costs (loss of work). Many studies show that the time patients stay out of work following coronary intervention is much longer than necessary. This leads to a considerable increase of indirect costs, which can far exceed the medical costs of the treatment. This prospective randomised study was done to determine whether specific information to patient and family doctor results in an earlier return to work. After catheter revascularisation 100 working patients (mean age 52.4 years) were randomised either to the intervention group (information to patient and family doctor) or to the control group (no specific information about return to work). Four months later 81 patients had returned to their previous jobs (mean sick leave 18.9 +/- 24.8 days) while 19 were still out of work. In the control group, the rate was 79% and the mean sick leave was 16.4 +/- 22.0 days (median 7); in the intervention group 83% had returned to work after a mean of 21.5 +/- 27.4 days (median 10). There was no significant difference between the two groups, neither according to the rate of returned workers nor to the duration of sick leave. In the subgroup of patients with a private insurance (23% of all) 96% started to work again (mean sick leave 5.7 +/- 5.1 days median 3.5), while the rate was 77% in the group of panel patients (mean sick leave 23.7 +/- 27.4 days, median 11). The difference in sick leave between these two groups was highly significant (p = 0.0003). Specific information to the patient and family doctor has no effect on the time patients stay out of work following catheter revascularisation. It seems that the observed delay depends on social and psychological factors that cannot be influenced directly.
The German Society for Cardiac Angiography and Interventions in Private Practice has started a registry of cardiac procedures since 1996 in order to establish a standard for performance. Although quality management for the cath lab makes sense and is also legally required, there is no generally recommended infrastructure for quality assurance existing in Germany at this time. Therefore, the German Society of Cardiologists in Private Practice (BNK) initiated a project in 1994 to develop a computer program for paperless documentation of diagnostic cardiac catheterizations and coronary interventions (PTCA) using a minimal data set. In 1996, 8 private associated groups participated in this project. The (anonymous) analysis of 10,316 diagnostic cardiac catheterizations and 2597 PTCA yielded the following results: In 95% of the patients, diagnostic cardiac catheterization was performed using the femoral and in 5% the brachial/radial approach. The mean volume of administered contrast medium was 164 +/- 138 ml/patient. The mean LV-EF was greater than 50% in 58.4% of the patients and between 30% and 50% in 10.1%. Coronary artery disease was diagnosed in 69.6% of the patients and valvular/congenital heart disease in 8.5%. In 18.4% of the patients undergoing diagnostic cardiac catheterizations no significant heart disease was identified. Mortality in the cath lab as well as the rate of cerebral insults was 0.05%. In 22.9% and 19% of the patients PTCA and cardiac surgery respectively was recommended. In patients undergoing PTCA, stable angina was present in 74.4% and unstable angina in 13.1%. Of the total number of PTCA procedures, 5.8% were performed in the setting of acute myocardial infarction. The PTCA lesion success rate was 96%, the mean diameter stenosis was 81% pre and 6% post-intervention. The mortality rate at 1 month post-PTCA was 0.4%, and myocardial infarction 1.0%. An acute occlusion occurred in 1.3% of the PTCA patients; 0.6% had to be transferred for emergency bypass surgery. None of the cath labs had on-site surgery. In comparison to other registries, our data show some similarities but also some different trends. Thus, our newly developed software proved to be reliable, fast and easy to use. Participating centers receive immediate feedback regarding their position within the whole group.
In 32 patients undergoing open-heart-surgery with extracorporeal circulation (ECC), platelet volume distribution curves (PVD) during and immediately and 24 and 48 hours after cardiopulmonary bypass were examined by an electronic particle size analyzer based on the Coulter-Counter-System. The PVD changes, i.e., the reduction of the mean platelet volume (MPV) and the platelet fall correlates significantly with the bypass time (r = 0.78). Two hours after the end of ECC, these changes remained completely irreversible or only partially reversible in patients with perfusion times longer than 60 minutes. In most of the patients with shorter perfusion times, we observed a normalisation of PVD curves and return of platelets to counts approaching normal levels.Some plasma coagulation parameters (i.e., concentration of clottable fibrinogen, FDP) were estimated in parallel and were found to be in good correlation with the platelet defects.In patients with marked changes of MPV up to 48 hours after the end of surgery, a pathologic volume distribution curve of thrombocytes was observed, but platelet counts returned in most of them to normal values. This indicates that the determination of PVD, as a simple reliable diagnostic parameter, gives more essential information about platelet damage than does the platelet count alone.
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