Patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) most commonly have refractory anemia accompanied by various degrees of granulocytopenia and thrombocytopenia. At the time of cardiac surgery, both major infections and bleeding are severe complications in patients with pancytopenia due to MDS. However, there were very few patients with MDS who had undergone open-heart surgery. We reported a case of mitral valve replacement in a patient with MDS. A 68-year-old man with valvular heart disease and MDS, with a platelet count of 1.9x10/mm, underwent successful mitral valve replacement.The mitral valve was replaced by an SJM 25A prosthesis after resection of left atrial thrombosis using cardiopulmonary bypass. Platelets were transfused after the bypass. Perioperative hemorrhage was moderate and postoperative course was uneventful. We evaluated platelet function by Sonoclot coagulation and a platelet function analyzer. We did not need a large amount of transfusion of red blood cells and platelets, and prevented major bleeding and severe wound infections in the acute postoperative state. Jpn. J.
A 63-year old man presented with back pain and abdominal pain that worsened after eating. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography revealed type B aortic dissection. Arteriography 20 days after dissection revealed celiac trunk stenosis and the superior mesenteric artery did not arise from the true lumen. Saphenous vein bypass grafting from the right common iliac artery to the superior mesenteric and gastroduodenal arteries was performed. The postoperative course was uneventful and the abdominal symptoms completely disappeared.
We describe complete emergency arterial coronary artery bypass grafting performed on the beating heart of a 73-year-old man with situs inversus totalis and triple-vessel disease. The right internal mammary artery was anastomosed to the left anterior descending artery in situ. The first and second obtuse marginal branches of the circumflex coronary and the posterior descending branch of the right coronary artery were sequentially revascularized using the left internal mammary and radial arteries in situ. The only abnormality was that the position of the heart mirrored that of a normal heart. Beating heart surgery appears to be as safe in patients with dextrocardia as in the general population. However, the position of the surgeon must be reconsidered for optimal handling of stabilizers and to facilitate access to anastomosis sites. Understanding mirror-image coronary arterial anatomy is important for successful surgical outcomes among patients with dextrocardia.
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