Abstract
Background: Patients with severely impaired left-ventricular pump function who are eligible for
heart transplantation increasingly undergo high-risk cardiac surgery due to the scarcity
of donor organs. If these patients also qualify for long-term mechanical support,
the latter can be used as back-up in case of postcardiotomy failure. Methods: Since 1994, 36 patients (34 male, 2 female; mean age 51 ± 7 years) underwent coronary
bypass surgery/aneurysmectomy (n = 27), aortic valve replacement (n = 4), both (n
= 1), or partial left ventriculectomy (n = 4) with a long-term mechanical assist device
(Novacor, HeartMate, DeBakey) and were kept on stand-by with the device. Average left
ventricular ejection fraction was 23 ± 9 %, NYHA 2.9 ± 0.5, and CCS 2.7 ± 0.9. An
intraaortic balloon pump was inserted prior to surgery in 13 patients. Results: In 31 patients, high-risk surgery was performed, whereas 5 patients underwent immediate
device placement as coronary revascularization was deemed impossible. 6 patients had
postcardiotomy failure after coronary bypass surgery and were immediately provided
with a long-term assist system. There were no significant differences in risk factors
between the patient subsets. All conservatively operated patients survived and left
the institution after 9.4 days and are currently at NYHA 1.5 ± 0.5 or CCS 1.0 ± 0,
respectively. 6 of the 11 LVAD patients could be bridged to heart transplantation
after 43 - 418 days, and 1 patient is still on support. Conclusion: High-risk conventional surgery with LVAD stand-by is feasible and seems to be a valuable
alternative for heart-transplant candidates.
Key words
High-risk surgery - heart failure - mechanical support
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Prof. Dr. med. C. Schmid
Klinik und Poliklinik für Thorax-, Herz- und Gefäßchirurgie
Albert-Schweitzer-Straße 33
48149 Münster
Germany
Telefon: + 49/251/8357412
Fax: + 49/251/8348316
eMail: schmid@uni-muenster.de