Endocardial mapping of electrical activity was carried out in 150 patients to guide antiarrhythmic surgery for drug-resistant ventricular tachycardia in the chronic phase of myocardial infarction. In 20 of these patients, the activation pattern of 27 distinct tachycardias was focal and diastolic potentials were recorded at three or more sites. In 26 tachycardias, the sequence of diastolic potentials progressed from the area of latest activation of one cycle toward the "origin" of the next cycle. In two patients, the heart was stimulated during tachycardia, resulting in entrainment of the tachycardia in both. Late potentials were recorded during entrainment at sites where diastolic potentials occurred during tachycardia. In 11 of the 20 patients, endocardial mapping was performed during sinus rhythm. In four of these, late potentials were observed during sinus rhythm at sites where diastolic potentials were recorded during tachycardia. In two patients without late potentials during sinus rhythm, late potentials were observed during stimulation and induced ectopic beats. The results support the concept that the mechanism of several of these tachycardias is based on reentry in a macrocircuit comprising a tract of surviving tissue traversing the infarct and the remaining healthy tissue. They also indicate that the absence of late potentials during sinus rhythm does not guarantee the absence of arrhythmogenic pathways.
Current mitral valve surgery with or without tricuspid valve repair does not eliminate preoperative paroxysmal or chronic AF. Secondly, because preoperative AF did not determine survival after mitral valve surgery, whereas postoperatively persisting AF was weakly associated with survival, atrial arrhythmia surgery primarily aims to reduce morbidity due to AF. Some characteristics can identify patients with increased propensity for persisting AF after surgery. Randomized studies of AF surgery are needed to identify suitable candidates for combined surgery.
This pilot study demonstrates the effectiveness and safety of maze III surgery for lone PAF. In patients without sick-sinus syndrome, this intervention offers a sensible alternative to His bundle ablation and lifelong pacemaker dependency.
Between 1981 and 1987, 88 consecutive patients were operated on for a thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm by simple crossclamping and a graft inclusion technique (without shunts or heparin). This article presents an analysis of the operative outcome and long-term foUow-up. Patient-and operationrelated variables are age (mean 64.3 years, range 28 to 82 years), sex (82 % men), rupture (20.5%), diabetes (2.3%~renal insufficiency (34.1%~chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (27.3%~previous aortic operation (31.8%), arterial hypertension (66%~postdissection (18.2%) versus degenerative (80.7%) origin, preoperative shock (11.4%~ischemic cerebrovascular (12.5%) or ischemic heart (17%) disease, peripheral vascular disease (14.8%), renal (mean 48 minutes, range 0 to 83 minutes) and lower spinal cord (mean 21 minutes, range 0 to 68 minutes) ischemic time, number of reattached intercostals, blood loss, and extent of the aneurysm (Crawford classification: type I, 16 patients [18.2%]; type II, 21 patients [23.8%]; type III, 29 patients [33%]; and type IV, 22 patients [25%]. Intraoperative mortality is 1.1% (n = 1). Thirty-day mortality is 5.9% (n = 5). Hospital mortality is 11.4% (n = 10): 7% for elective cases and 28 % for ruptured aneurysms (p =0.014). The survival at 2 years is 78 % ± (4.4%) and at 5 years 54 % ± (5.3%). Postoperative spinal cord injury occurred in 12 patients (13.8%) (5 had paraplegia and 7 had paraparesis) and postoperative renal dysfunction necessitating dialysis in 12 patients (14.1%). Risk stratification for hospital death, late death, renal failure, and spinal cord dysfunction was performed by means of multivariate logistic regression and Cox proportional hazard regression as appropriate. The best fitting.model to predict hospital death includes preoperative shock (p = 0.02~female sex (p = 0.06~preoperative elevated serum creatinine level (p = 0.06~and preoperative myocardial infarction (p = 0.08). Variables predictive for late death are postoperative dialysis (p = 0.002~age (p = 0.008~and rupture (p = 0.04). The risk factors of postoperative dialysis are age (p = 0.003) and preoperative serum creatinine level (p = 0.04). The risk of postoperative spinal cord dysfunction increases with longer lower spinal cord ischemic time (p =0.02) and with the presence of preoperative shock (p = 0.06).
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