Off-Pump Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting with Use of the Octopus 2 Stabilization System

Authors

  • Belhhan Akpinar Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kadir Has University Medical Faculty, Florence Nightingale Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey
  • Mustafa Güden Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kadir Has University Medical Faculty, Florence Nightingale Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey
  • Ertan Sagbas Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kadir Has University Medical Faculty, Florence Nightingale Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey
  • Ilhan Sanisoglu Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Kadir Has University Medical Faculty, Florence Nightingale Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey
  • Vedat Aytekin Department of Cardiology, Kadir Has University Medical Faculty, Florence Nightingale Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey
  • Osman Bayindir Department of Anesthesiology, Kadir Has University Medical Faculty, Florence Nightingale Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey

Abstract

Background: The treatment of coronary artery disease has evolved rapidly over the last two decades. The gold standard of surgical revascularization, the on-pump coronary artery bypass graft, has been challenged by the development of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. Our experience with the alternative of the off-pump ("beating heart") coronary artery bypass (OPCAB) technique during a period of 18 months suggests that OPCAB avoids the complications of cardiopulmonary bypass and offers patients the benefit of long-term graft patency that greatly exceeds that of current endovascular technologies.

Methods: The early results of 126 OPCAB procedures performed through a medial sternotomy incision during a period of 18 months were evaluated. There were 80 male and 46 female patients, with a mean age of 69 ± 4.3 years. Emergency cases and reoperations were not included. A total of 268 anastomoses were performed, with a mean number of 2.12 anastomoses per patient. Conduits used, with their percentage of use, were: left internal thoracic artery (LITA)(100%), right internal thoracic artery (11.1%), greater saphenous vein (84%), and radial artery (31%). In 72% of the cases, off-pump surgery was chosen because of patient risk factors such as atherosclerotic aortic disease, previous cerebrovascular accident or carotid artery disease, renal dysfunction, malignancy or poor left ventricular function.

Results: There was no operative mortality. One-month postoperative mortality was three patients (2.3%). Two died because of mesenteric ischemia, and the other death was due to cardiac failure. Seventy-one patients had a control angiogram before discharge. The patency of LITA anastomosis was 100% while overall patency rate was 95%. In 43 patients for whom an angiogram could not be performed, a Thallum 201 stress test was performed three months postoperatively. Thirty-eight patients had a normal test while five patients showed signs of ischemia. These patients had a control angiogram: in four patients anastomoses were patent, but in one patient there was a severe narrowing of a venous anastomosis to the distal right coronary artery (RCA) which was corrected with angioplasty. In the whole series eight patients (6.3%) refused to have any control examination.

Conclusions: Our early results suggest that off-pump CABG with Octopus 2 (Medtronic, Inc., Minneapolis, MN) can be a good alternative in high risk patients who need multiple vessel revascularization.

Published

2000-12-01

How to Cite

Akpinar, B., Güden, M., Sagbas, E., Sanisoglu, I., Aytekin, V., & Bayindir, O. (2000). Off-Pump Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting with Use of the Octopus 2 Stabilization System. The Heart Surgery Forum, 3(4), E282-E286. Retrieved from https://journal.hsforum.com/index.php/HSF/article/view/6467

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