Coronary artery bypass surgery
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Coronary artery bypass surgery, also coronary artery bypass graft surgery and heart bypass (colloquial), is a surgical procedure performed on patients with coronary artery disease (see atherosclerosis) for the relief of angina and possible improved heart muscle function. Veins or arteries from elsewhere in the patient's body are grafted from the aorta to the coronary arteries, bypassing coronary artery narrowings caused by atherosclerosis and improve the blood supply to the myocardium (heart muscle).
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Terminology
There are many variations on terminology, in which one or more of 'artery', 'bypass' or 'graft' is left out. The acronym for this type of surgery might therefore be CABG (pronounced 'cabbage'),<ref>American Heart Association. Heart Bypass Surgery. URL: http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4484. Accessed on March 26, 2006.</ref> CABGs (pronounced 'cabbages') or CAGS (pronounced phonetically).
Prognosis
Prognosis following CABG depends on a variety of factors, but successful grafts typically last around 10-15 years.
Complications
- Infection - at site where graft was harvested, chest
- Non-union/malunion of sternum (breast bone)
- Anesthetic complications - drug reactions (e.g. malignant hyperthermia)
- Myocardial infarction due to hypoperfusion or early graft occlusion
- Graft failure leading to myocardial infarction
- Death due to myocardial infarction, stroke, renal failure, sepsis
- Acute renal failure due to hypoperfusion
- Stroke - during reperfusion
- Stenosis of the graft (late) - particularily of saphenous vein grafts
- Keloid scarring
- Chronic pain - at incision sites
Technical description
First, the sternum is cut down the middle with a special bone saw and the chest opened (a procedure known as "cracking the chest" or a median sternotomy). Depending on a number of factors, the surgeon may decide to place the patient on cardiopulmonary bypass ("on-pump") or use suction-stabilizing devices to hold the heart still while sewing the anastamoses ("off-pump"). Blood vessels are harvested from elsewhere in the body for grafting. Sometimes artery end branches supplying tissues near the heart are rerouted to create the bypass.
Conduits used for bypass
Typically, the left internal thoracic artery (LITA) (previously referred to as left internal mammary artery or LIMA) and right internal thoracic artery are used for bypass. If additional bypasses are required the great saphenous vein from the leg is frequently used.
Veins that are used either have their valves removed or are turned around so that the valves in them do not occlude blood flow in the graft. LITA grafts are longer-lasting than vein grafts, both because the artery is more robust than a vein and because, being already connected to the arterial tree, the LITA need only be grafted at one end. The LITA is usually grafted to the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) because of it superior long-term patency when compared to saphenous vein grafts.<ref>Kitamura S, Kawachi K, Kawata T, Kobayashi S, Mizuguchi K, Kameda Y, Nishioka H, Hamada Y, Yoshida Y. [Ten-year survival and cardiac event-free rates in Japanese patients with the left anterior descending artery revascularized with internal thoracic artery or saphenous vein graft: a comparative study] Nippon Geka Gakkai Zasshi. 1996 Mar;97(3):202-9. PMID 8649330.</ref><ref>Arima M, Kanoh T, Suzuki T, Kuremoto K, Tanimoto K, Oigawa T, Matsuda S. Serial Angiographic Follow-up Beyond 10 Years After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting. Circ J. 2005 Aug;69(8):896-902. PMID 16041156. Free Full Text.</ref>
The LAD supplies the left ventricle, the part of the heart that pumps oxygenated blood around the body, and is the most important for survival. Alternatively, an artery such as the radial artery from the arm or gastroepiploic artery from the stomach, may be used in place of a vein.
History
The technique was pioneered by Argentinian René Favaloro and others at the Cleveland Clinic in the late 1960s.<ref>Captur G. Memento for Rene Favaloro. Tex Heart Inst J. 2004;31(1):47-60. PMID 15061628. Free Full Text.</ref> Currently, about 500,000 CABGs are performed in the United States each year.
See also
References
<references/>
External links
- Advances in Cardiovascular Surgery and Cardiothoracic Surgical Procedures
- Cardiothoracic Surgery Notes an online interactive review developed by residents in cardiothoracic surgery
- Contenidos de Enfermería y Cirugía Cardiaca
- CTSNet: The Cardiothoracic Surgery Network
- Curso de Enfermería y Cirugía Cardiaca
- Heart Assist Devices
- LVAD Simulator
- Perfusion Line
- The CardioThoracic Surgery Network: Residents Section
- The Heart Surgery Forum®
- The Implantable Artificial Heart Project
- The Virtual Textbook Of Extracorporeal Technology
- Yale: Introduction to Cardiothoracic Imaging
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fr:pontage aorto-coronarien ja:冠動脈大動脈バイパス移植術 nl:CABG pt:Cirurgia cardiovascular