1.A Case of Tricuspid Leaflet Augmentation for Severe Secondary Tricuspid Regurgitation
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2013;42(2):137-140
A 71-year old woman, who underwent direct closure of an atrial septal defect with mild tricuspid regurgitation (TR) 18 years previously, suffered terminal cardiac failure with extreme cardiomegaly, mitral regurgitation and severe TR. Medical treatment gradually became ineffectual and we decided to perform surgical therapy. Mitral annuloplasty with a prosthetic ring, tricuspid valve repair, plications of extended bilateral atrium walls and epicardial ventricular pacemaker implantation were performed. In tricuspid valve repair, anterior tricuspid leaflet was augmented by use of glutaraldehyde-preserved autologus pericardial patch and tricuspid annuloplasty with addition of a slightly larger prosthetic ring. Atrio-ventricular regurgitations disappeared and she was discharged 63 days after the operation. Valve extension is a very effective technique to treat severe secondary TR, and long term follow-up is necessary.
2.Surgical Treatment of Pulmonary Artery Aneurysm Thirty-Eight Years after an Operation for Atrial Septal Defect
Kimiyo Ono ; Naoaki Takemoto ; Hiroaki Kuroda
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2007;36(6):345-347
Pulmonary artery aneurysm (PAA) may be associated with congenital shunt disease such as patent ductus arteriosus, and its frequency and management are often controversial. We report successful surgical treatment of PAA following an operation for atrial septal defect (ASD). The patient was a 47-year-old woman who underwent closure of ASD at the age of 9. When she was investigated because of thyroid tumor, enlargement of her main pulmonary artery was pointed out and she was admitted to our hospital. Several examinations revealed a diagnosis of pulmonary valve insufficiency and 70mm PAA with dilatation extending to both proximal arteries. We performed replacements of pulmonary valve and pulmonary artery with a bioprosthetic valve and T-shaped graft. The patient is doing well 2 years after operation.
3.Open Heart Surgery Using a Centrifugal Pump in a Patient Suffering from Hereditary Spherocytosis.
Yohichi Hara ; Shingo Ishiguro ; Hiroaki Kuroda ; Tohru Mori
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1994;23(4):280-283
A very rare case of open heart surgery associated with hereditary spherocytosis (HS) is reported. A 10-year-old girl was admitted for repair of an atrial septal defect (ASD). She was found to have HS by the microscopic findings of a blood smear and characteristic osmotic fragility, but splenectomy had not been undertaken preoperatively. She underwent successful radical operation by means of a centrifugal pump, and poloxamer 188 and haptoglobin were used during cardiopulmonary bypass for prevention of hemolysis. No significant hemolysis occurred intra- or postoperatively. Cardioplumonary bypass using a centrifugal pump appeared to be effective in this patient with HS.
4.A Case of Emergency Surgery for Ruptured Descending Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm into the Left Lung in an Elderly Patient.
Takashi Ichiba ; Satoshi Kamihira ; Yasushi Ashida ; Hiroaki Kuroda ; Shigetugu Ohgi
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1998;27(3):192-195
We report an 85-year-old woman with rupture of aneurysm of the descending thoracic aorta into the left lung. She was admitted with sudden onset back pain and hemoptysis. Emergency operation was performed to replace the ruptured descending thoracic aorta, and lower lobectomy of left lung. The left lobectomy ensured that hematoma was not left in lung, although it decreased respiratory function after operation. In addition, it decreased bleeding and operating time compared to segmental resection. She was discharged without contracting an infection in the lung or graft, although she needed tracheotomy for a time. We suggest that the lower lobectomy of lung was an important factor in saving this elderly patient with rupture of an aneurysm into the left lung.
5.Long-Term Results after Prosthetic Bypass Surgery for Chronic Limb Ischemia.
Masahiko Ikebuchi ; Toshihiko Tanabe ; Hiroaki Kuroda ; Kimiyo Ono
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2002;31(3):177-182
We evaluated long-term results of 126 consecutive bypass surgeries for chronic limb ischemia including 54 aorto-femoral (AF), 26 femoro-femoral crossover (FF), 7 axillo-femoral (AxF), and 39 femoro-above the knee popliteal (FP) bypasses. Patients who had undergone FF bypasses were significantly older than those who received AF bypasses (p<0.01). Preoperative ankle brachial pressure indices (ABI) of the AxF and FF patients were significantly lower than those of AF patients (p<0.05). Compared with AF patients, the AxF and FF groups included significantly higher percentages of Fontaine III and IV limbs treated by limb salvage surgery (p<0.05). The cumulative graft patency rates 5 years after AF, FF, and FP bypasses were 94.7%, 91.3%, and 64.3%, respectively. In the FP group, patients with intermittent claudication before surgery showed a 5-year graft patency rate of 82.5%, while that in patients who underwent surgery for limb salvage was 43.3%. The secondary graft patency rates 5 years after AF, FF, and FP bypasses were 94.6%, 91.3%, and 83.3%, respectively. All patients whose bypass grafts were occluded were male and were smokers. Poor run-off and insufficient anticoagulation therapies were also associated with graft occlusion. Two of the 12 patients who developed graft occlusion underwent limb amputation.
6.Study of operation results for acute aorta dissociation of DeBakey I tape.Replacement technique of the ascending aorta by an artificial blood vessel.
Yohichi HARA ; Satoshi KAMIHIRA ; Shingo ISHIGURO ; Seiichiro SASAKI ; Hiroaki KURODA ; Tohru MORI
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1993;22(6):480-483
From January of 1987 to December 1992, twelve patients (7 males and 5 females, mean age, 52.8 years) underwent emergency surgery for DeBakey type I acute aortic dissection. The surgical procedure was resection of the initial intimal tear and replacement of the ascending aorta (four patients underwent hemiarch replacement). Operative mortality was 41.7% (5/12). Three died in the operating room due to heart failure (2) and uncontrollable bleeding (1). Another two early deaths resulted from extension of the residual false lumen. All surviving patients each had a patent double-channeled aorta and aneurysmal dilatation of the false lumen was noted in 3 patients. There were two late deaths, one due to rupture of the residual false lumen and the other, to stroke during re-operation for enlargement of the residual false lumen. It is apparent from these results that in type I acute aortic dissection extensive operation such as total arch replacement is necessary.
7.Complications and Prognoses of Patients Treated for Stanford Type B Aortic Dissection.
Hiroaki Kuroda ; Seiichiro Sasaki ; Shingo Ishiguro ; Yohichi Hara ; Takafumi Hamasaki ; Tohru Mori
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1994;23(2):92-96
In the past 11 years, we treated 41 patients with Stanford type B aortic dissection. Principally, medical therapy was carried out and surgery was performed only when complications related to the dissection occurred. Twenty two patients (53.7%) had complications, including 5 (12%) with peripheral limb ischemia, 3 (7%) with rupture, 13 (32%) with dilatation of the aorta, 4 (10%) with extension of dissection (type A dissection). Seventeen patients received surgery including palliative operation. Among 41 patients, 3 died due to aortic rupture and 2 died at surgery for type A dissection, while 4 of them had developed proximal extension of the dissection. The 5-year survival rate for all patients was 86.7±6.6%. Long term survival will improve in patients with Stanford type B aortic dissection when the operative mortality for type A dissection is reduced and sound management policies are developed.
8.Aortic Dissection Associated with Atherosclerotic Aortic Aneurysm.
Hiroaki Kuroda ; Tasuku Honda ; Yasushi Ashida ; Yohichi Hara ; Shingo Ishiguro ; Tohru Mori
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1995;24(1):1-5
Between January 1980 and September 1993, 7(8.4%) of 83 patients with aortic dissection had coincident atherosclerotic true aneurysms of thoracic and/or abdominal aorta or had undergone operation of true aortic aneurysms. There was no difference in the segments of aortic dissection; 4 of 50 patinets classified as DeBakey III and 3 of 33 patients classified as DeBakey I or II, whereas the site of atherosclerotic true aneurysms was more often in the abdominal aorta than in the thoracic aorta. Five patients had undergone surgery for or had the abdominal aortic aneurysms and 2 patients had thoracic aortic aneurysms. In 2 patients who had previously undergone abdominal aortic aneurysmectomy, the dissected aorta ruptured soon after the onset of dissection. In the patients in whom the true aneurysm and the aortic dissection involve the same segments surgical treatment would be extended and complex.
9.Response of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism to Changes in Arterial Carbon Dioxide Tension during Moderate Hypothermic Cardiopulmonary Bypass in Patients with Cerebrovascular Disease.
Satoshi Kamihira ; Tasuku Honda ; Yasushi Kanaoka ; Youichi Hara ; Shingo Ishiguro ; Hiroaki Kuroda ; Shigetsugu Ohgi ; Tohru Mori
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1995;24(1):11-17
The purpose of this study was to examine the responses of cerebral blood flow and metabolism to changes in arterial carbon dioxide tension during moderate hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass in patients with cerebrovascular disease undergoing open heart surgery. Computed tomography scan (CT) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) were performed preoperatively for 17 patients. The patients were categorized according to their CT and SPECT findings. Ten patients were included in the normal group, 7 patients were included in the CVD group. Blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral artery (MCAv) was measured by means of transcranial Doppler ultrasonography at two different arterial carbon dioxide tensions (at a high PaCO2 of 45-50mmHg, at a low PaCO2 of 30-35mmHg, uncorrected for body temperature) during moderate steady-state hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass. Simultaneously cerebral oxygen consumption was estimated by relating the arteriovenous oxygen content difference to flow velocity (D-CMRO2). MCAv and D-CMRO2 were expressed as percentages of the values determined at 30 minutes before cardiopulmonary bypass. In the normal group, a PaCO2 of 47.4±2.5mmHg (mean±SD) was associated with an MCAv of 99.4±17.8% and a D-CMRO2 of 53.4±25.5%, while a PaCO2 of 33.7±1.3mmHg was associated with an MCAv of 64.3±18.1% and a D-CMRO2 of 53.5±26.2%. In the CVD group, a PaCO2 of 49.1±4.2mmHg was associated with an MCAv of 81.4±22.3% and a D-CMRO2 of 34.0±19.4%, while a PaCO2 of 33.6±1.3mmHg was associated with an MCAv of 54.7±23.8% and a D-CMRO2 of 49.0±19.4%. We conclude that in patients with cerebrovascular disease cerebral blood flow is changed in response to changes in arterial dioxide tension during moderate hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass, however a high PaCO2 depresses cerebral oxygen consumption because hypercarbia may cause potentially harmful redistribution of regional cerebral blood flow away from marginally-perfused to otherwise well-perfused areas.
10.A Case of Localized Pericarditis Associated with Organized Hematoma.
Shingo Ishiguro ; Hiroaki Kuroda ; Yohichi Hara ; Yasushi Ashida ; Akihiko Inoue ; Tohru Mori
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1996;25(5):318-320
A 64-year-old man with a history of anterior blunt trauma 10 years previously was admitted to our hospital complaining of general fatigue. A plain chest roentgenogram showed pericardial calcification. Computed tomography and echocardiography showed the mass to be a calcified capsule in the anterior mediastinum compressing the right side of the heart. He underwent an operation through a median sternotomy. The mass was an organized hematoma encapsulated by a calcified fibrous and serous layer of the pericardium. The hematoma was resected together with the calcified pericardium under cardiopulmonary bypass. His postoperative course was uneventful. He had no history of hemopericardium but had experienced blunt chest trauma that seemed to have induced the subsequent localized constrictive pericarditis.