Midterm results of this alternative repair technique are promising, considering the high prevalence of complex anatomical lesions. The technique is simple, easily reproducible and rapidly feasible also when mitral exposure is suboptimal.
The mitral valve was approached through a vertical transeptal incision extended into the roof of the left atrium in 111 patients. Good exposure was invariably provided even in unfavorable situations such as a small left atrium combined with right ventricular hypertrophy or a previously implanted aortic prosthesis. The only hospital death in the entire series was not related to this approach to the mitral valve. Due to breakage of the suture in the roof of the left atrium and to incomplete reconstruction of the atrial septum resulting in a large left-to-right shunt, 2 patients required reinstitution of cardiopulmonary bypass. Both had a smooth postoperative course. Other intra- or postoperative complications related to the incision did not occur. Duration of cardiopulmonary bypass and aortic occlusion was not significantly different from that of patients operated upon through the conventional left atrial approach in the year preceding the experience embraced by this study. Only 3 of 52 patients who were preoperatively in sinus rhythm were discharged in atrial fibrillation. Enhanced atrial vulnerability was demonstrated preoperatively in all 3. These data support a wide application of the extended vertical transeptal approach in mitral valve surgery.
In spite of the greater complexity, conservative surgery to correct anterior mitral valve prolapse pertains high success rate of long term. Recent technical modifications ('edge-to-edge' technique) may allow more expeditious and reproducible procedures with expected favorable influence of mitral valve repair applicability.
Recovery of myocardial contraction represents an important target of coronary revascularization and the preoperative recognition of viable akinetic (hibernating) myocardium is a crucial point of the preoperative investigation of patients with chronically depressed left ventricular function. In 14 patients dobutamine infusion during echocardiography was utilized to evoke the contractile reserve retained by viable akinetic segments. Redistribution of thallium(TI)-201 after the rest injection was also used to assess the viability of akinetic areas. The wall motion response to dobutamine infusion predicted immediate postoperative improvement in 85 of 93 segments (sensitivity 91.3%) and identified 25 of the 32 segments which did not exhibit early postoperative improvement (specificity 78.1%). Rest redistribution of TI-201 demonstrated high sensitivity (93.0%) but low specificity (43.7%) for predicting the early recovery of regional wall motion. When late recovery was also considered, the specificity of this method increased to 64.0%. Rest distribution of TI-201 identifies viability which is not necessarily associated with the early recovery of function postoperatively. When the echo-dobutamine test is positive, on the other hand, the recovery of function usually occurs immediately after revascularization and the operative risk is expected to be low even in the presence of severely compromised left ventricular function.
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