Gersak Borut, Sutlic Zeljko
Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, University Medical Center, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Heart Surg Forum. 2002;5(2):182-6.
The concept of cardiac surgery on the beating heart is acceptable rationale for the cardiac surgery in the next millenium. Beating heart (off-pump) coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) techniques have led us to consider the possibility for performing the aortic and mitral valve surgery (mitral valve repairs and replacements - with or without CABG) on the beating heart with the technique of retrograde oxygenated coronary sinus perfusion.
We used the technique of retrograde oxygenated blood coronary sinus perfusion in 78 patients (Group All) - (36 patients were with extremely low ejection fraction (Group X) - 62% of whom were in New York Heart Association (NYHA) class 4 and 34% of whom were in NYHA class 3). The procedures for the patients were: aortic, mitral and tricuspid valve surgery, in combination with CABG in ischemic patients. CABG was done in all the cases off-pump. In addition, we performed a case match study for 37 patients with good ejection fraction (51.65 +/- 11.88) (Beating Heart Group) operated on the beating heart with most appropriate group of patients (No. 37) operated in our institutions on arrested heart (ejection fraction 51.07 +/- 12.93) (Arrested Heart Group). The case match selection criteria were: gender, left ventricular ejection fraction, atrial fibrillation, hypertension, pulmonary hypertension, and diabetes. The selected beating heart group and selected arrested heart groups were without statistically significant differences for the mentioned criteria.
There were statistically significant differences between Beating Heart Group and Arrested Heart Group in the duration of Cardiopulmonary Bypass Time (69.35 +/- 13.52 min. versus 93.59 +/- 28.54 min.), p<0.001, and statistically significant differences in Aortic Cross Clamp Time (46.5 +/- 8.95 min. versus 61.5 +/- 18.34 min.), p<0.001. The values for Creatinin Kinase (CK) and LDH were not statistically different, however the absolute values for Beating Heart Group were lower. There was no statistical difference in complication rate for both the groups for: sternal infection, bleeding, death, atrial fibrillation, AV block and neurological complications. The total early mortality for all the patients was 5.1% (4 out of 78) - for the group X 8.3 % (3 of 36 patients). Two were in-hospital deaths. One patient with triple-vessel disease and acute mitral insufficiency on intra aortic balloon pump (IABP) had been operated on 6 days after acute myocardial infarction (AMI). The cause of the death was systemic meticillin resistant staphylococus aureus (MRSA) infection - (eight days prior to our operation, arthrodesis of the talocrural joint was performed by an orthopedic surgeon). The other death was a female patient who was operated on after previous multiple cerebrovascular infarctions (CVI) (cause of the death was CVI). In addition, one patient died one month after the operation because of prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE) on aortic and mitral valves (silver-coated silzone aortic and mitral valves were implanted because of chronic latent asymptomatic tibial osteitis). None of these deaths were cardiac related.
We conclude that beating heart valve surgery (any combination) with or without CABG significantly lower the cardiopulmonary bypass and aortic cross clamp time. In addition, the advantages of beating-heart surgery are 1) the perfused myocardial muscle, 2) the heart is not doing any work, 3) no reperfusion injury, 4) the possibility for ablation of atrial fibrillation on the beating heart, and 5) testing of the mitral valve repair is done in real physiologic conditions in the state of left ventricle beating tonus. The procedure could be the procedure of choice for the valve operation or combined operations (valve operation and CABG) in high-risk patients with low ejection fractions. There is no doubt that at present day in cardiac surgery exist at least two major factors for mortality and morbidity after cardiac surgery, which are operation - related, namely cardiopulmonary bypass time and its duration and aortic cross clamp time (ischemic time of myocardium). In the last few years a number of different techniques emerged in the field of cardiac surgery, which were directed toward better results in the selected high risk patients or to minimize the deleterious effects of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) on the overall postoperative performance [Calafiore 1996, Tasdemir 1998]. Due to the fact, that the cardiac muscle should be protected at most during the cardiac arrest, retrograde blood cardioplegia was successfully introduced [Buckberg 1990], and more - the warm cardioplegia is being used recently [Kawasuji 1997]. The natural status of the human heart is the beating status, so it is reasonable to try to perform the operations on the beating heart. This has been done recently with the MID - CAB and OP - CAB (off-pump CABG) operations [Tasdemir 1998]. The retrograde warm blood cardioplegia has therefore led us to the premise, that with retrograde oxygenated blood perfusion it would be possible to achieve the operations on the beating heart even in the open heart surgery, such as aortic and/or mitral valve surgery. All will agree that the most damaging effect of the cardioplegia is the reperfusion injury [Allen 1997], and it is obvious that with the technique of retrograde continuous oxygenated blood perfusion this effect will be canceled. In this article, we would like to show the how-to technique for the operations on the beating heart in the case of operations on the aortic valve replacement (AVR) with mitral valve repair (MVR) or replacement MVR and with/without concomitant coronary artery bypass (CABG) surgery. The tricuspid valve repair (PTV) is normally done on the beating heart and there it is realized what problems or technical difficulties may arise during procedures on the mitral valve: the walls of the ventricles are not flattened and the exposure of the mitral valve is challenging task. Furthermore, the free walls of the ventricles with interventricular septum are in the state of the tonus, so every force applied to better expose the aortic or mitral valve is not acceptable
心脏不停跳心脏手术的概念是下一个千年心脏手术可接受的基本原理。心脏不停跳(非体外循环)冠状动脉搭桥术(CABG)技术使我们考虑采用逆行氧合冠状窦灌注技术在心脏不停跳的情况下进行主动脉和二尖瓣手术(二尖瓣修复和置换术——伴或不伴CABG)的可能性。
我们对78例患者(全组)采用逆行氧合血冠状窦灌注技术——(36例患者射血分数极低(X组)——其中62%为纽约心脏协会(NYHA)4级,34%为NYHA 3级)。患者的手术包括:主动脉、二尖瓣和三尖瓣手术,缺血患者联合CABG。所有病例均在非体外循环下进行CABG。此外,我们对37例射血分数良好(51.65±11.88)的患者(心脏不停跳组)进行了病例匹配研究,将其与在我们机构接受心脏停跳手术(射血分数51.07±12.93)(心脏停跳组)的最合适的一组患者(37例)进行匹配。病例匹配选择标准为:性别、左心室射血分数、心房颤动、高血压、肺动脉高压和糖尿病。所选的心脏不停跳组和所选的心脏停跳组在上述标准方面无统计学显著差异。
心脏不停跳组和心脏停跳组在体外循环时间(69.35±13.52分钟对93.59±28.54分钟)上有统计学显著差异,p<0.001,在主动脉阻断时间(46.5±8.95分钟对61.5±18.34分钟)上也有统计学显著差异,p<0.001。肌酸激酶(CK)和乳酸脱氢酶的值无统计学差异,但心脏不停跳组的绝对值较低。两组在胸骨感染、出血、死亡、心房颤动、房室传导阻滞和神经并发症的并发症发生率上无统计学差异。所有患者的早期总死亡率为5.1%(78例中有4例)——X组为8.3%(36例中有3例)。2例为住院死亡。1例患有三支血管病变且在主动脉内球囊反搏(IABP)辅助下患有急性二尖瓣关闭不全的患者在急性心肌梗死(AMI)后6天接受手术。死亡原因是耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(MRSA)全身感染——(在我们手术前8天,一名骨科医生对距小腿关节进行了关节固定术)。另1例死亡是一名女性患者,她在先前多次脑血管梗死(CVI)后接受手术(死亡原因是CVI)。此外,1例患者在术后1个月因主动脉和二尖瓣人工瓣膜心内膜炎(PVE)死亡(因慢性潜伏无症状胫骨骨炎植入了镀银的西罗莫司主动脉和二尖瓣瓣膜)。这些死亡均与心脏无关。
我们得出结论,心脏不停跳瓣膜手术(任何组合)伴或不伴CABG可显著缩短体外循环和主动脉阻断时间。此外,心脏不停跳手术的优点包括:1)心肌得到灌注;2)心脏不做功;3)无再灌注损伤;4)在心脏不停跳时有可能消融心房颤动;5)在左心室搏动张力状态下的真实生理条件下对二尖瓣修复进行测试。该手术可能是射血分数低的高危患者进行瓣膜手术或联合手术(瓣膜手术和CABG)的首选手术。毫无疑问,目前心脏手术中至少存在两个与手术相关的导致心脏手术后死亡率和发病率的主要因素,即体外循环时间及其持续时间和主动脉阻断时间(心肌缺血时间)。在过去几年中,心脏手术领域出现了许多不同的技术,这些技术旨在为选定的高危患者取得更好的结果或尽量减少体外循环(CPB)对整体术后表现的有害影响[卡拉菲奥雷,1996年;塔斯德米尔,1998年]。由于在心脏停搏期间应最大限度地保护心肌这一事实,逆行血液心脏停搏术已被成功引入[巴克伯格,1990年],而且最近正在使用温血心脏停搏术[川辻,1997年]。人类心脏的自然状态是跳动状态,因此尝试在心脏不停跳的情况下进行手术是合理的。最近通过微创冠状动脉搭桥术(MID - CAB)和非体外循环冠状动脉搭桥术(OP - CAB)已经做到了这一点[塔斯德米尔,1998年]。因此,逆行温血心脏停搏术使我们得出这样的前提,即通过逆行氧合血灌注,即使在心脏直视手术中,如主动脉和/或二尖瓣手术,也有可能在心脏不停跳的情况下完成手术。所有人都同意心脏停搏最具破坏性的影响是再灌注损伤[艾伦,1997年],很明显,通过逆行持续氧合血灌注技术,这种影响将被消除。在本文中,我们将展示在进行主动脉瓣置换术(AVR)合并二尖瓣修复术(MVR)或二尖瓣置换术(MVR)以及伴或不伴冠状动脉搭桥(CABG)手术的情况下,心脏不停跳手术的操作技术。三尖瓣修复术(PTV)通常在心脏不停跳的情况下进行,并且在那里可以认识到在二尖瓣手术过程中可能出现哪些问题或技术困难:心室壁没有变平,二尖瓣的暴露是一项具有挑战性的任务。此外,带有室间隔的心室游离壁处于张力状态,因此为更好地暴露主动脉或二尖瓣而施加的任何力量都是不可接受的