Donzeau-Gouge P, Touati G, Vouhé P R, Roy A, Farge C, Leca F, Neveux J Y
Unité de chirurgie thoracique et cardiovasculaire, clinique du Bois de Verrières, Antony.
Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss. 1990 Nov;83(12):1811-5.
Ten of 1,025 patients undergoing coronary bypass surgery received one or two bovine internal mammary artery grafts. Surgery consisted in quadruple coronary bypass in 1 case, triple coronary bypass in 3 cases and double coronary bypass in 6 cases using 4 autologous saphenous vein grafts, 6 autologous internal mammary artery grafts and 13 bovine internal mammary artery grafts. It was necessary to use bovine internal mammary artery grafts because of total bilateral venous stripping in 5 patients, diffuse, bilateral varicose veins in 4 patients and because of the insufficient length of the vein in 1 patient. Short and medium-term (12 months) angiographic studies of the bovine grafts showed 5 occluded grafts, 2 proximal graft stenoses, and 1 patient graft up to the time of his death of extracardiac causes, with a maximum follow-up of 13 months. One of these 10 patients died in the early postoperative period of extracardiac causes with a patent bovine coronary graft. Another patient died in the 5th postoperative month during reoperation motivated by occlusion of the two implanted bovine coronary grafts. The other 8 patients are alive and stable from the coronary view point. Bovine internal mammary artery grafts may be used to manage an acute episode of coronary insufficiency by providing the time for the collateral circulation to develop but it does not provide a complete and durable method of revascularisation. Their use should therefore be reserved for exceptional cases.