1.Aortic Valve Replacement via the Right Parasternal Approach with Thyroid Tumor
Takumi Kawase ; Yasuyuki Bito ; Takashi Murakami ; Mitsuharu Hosono ; Yasuo Suehiro ; Shinsuke Nishimura ; Shigefumi Suehiro ; Toshihiko Shibata
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2017;46(3):122-125
A 76-year-old woman required aortic valve replacement due to severe aortic stenosis. She had a huge thyroid cancer, which invaded the innominate and left internal jugular veins. We planned a two-stage operation : the first involved aortic valve replacement ; and the second involved operation of the thyroid cancer. To avoid median sternotomy, we adopted the right parasternal approach. A 7-cm right parasternal skin incision was made. The third and fourth costal cartilages were cut and bent into the right thoracic cavity, without removal of the ribs. The postoperative course was uneventful, and second operation was performed via the median sternotomy approach on postoperative day 53. The right parasternal approach can be used as an alternative when sternotomy is unsuitable in cases of aortic valve replacement.
2.Surgery for Aortic Valve Stenosis in a Patient with an Anomalous Origin of the Left Coronary Artery
Yasuyuki Bito ; Hidekazu Hirai ; Yasuyuki Sasaki ; Mitsuharu Hosono ; Atsushi Nakahira ; Yasuo Suehiro ; Yuko Kubota ; Daisuke Kaku ; Makoto Miyabe ; Shigefumi Suehiro
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2014;43(5):279-282
Anomalous origin of the coronary artery is rare. Various complications have been reported in patients with this anomaly undergoing heart valve surgery. We describe a case of aortic valve stenosis combined with an anomalous origin of the left coronary artery. An 84-year-old man with exertional dyspnea was referred for surgical treatment of severe aortic valve stenosis. Coronary angiography and computed tomography of the coronary artery revealed a coronary arterial anomaly : the left anterior descending coronary artery originated as a branch of the right coronary artery, and the left circumflex artery separately originated from the right coronary sinus and extended behind the aortic annulus. To prevent injury to the anomalous circumflex artery during surgery, the artery was separated from the fatty tissue around the aortic annulus and dissected free from the aortic wall before the performance of transverse aortotomy. The coronary artery exhibited a single orifice that was significantly enlarged. Whether antegrade infusion of the cardioplegic solution could be achieved was difficult to determine. To perform the retrograde infusion, the catheter tip was inserted directly into the coronary sinus from the epicardium because the orifice in the right atrium was lattice-like. Aortic valve replacement was successfully performed with supra-annular prosthesis insertion using a 19-mm Mosaic porcine valve (Medtronic, Minneapolis, MN, USA). The postoperative course was uneventful. When aortic valve replacement is performed for patients with an anomalous coronary artery, careful performance of operative procedures and postoperative observation are considered important for the prevention of specific perioperative complications, such as intraoperative coronary injury or postoperative myocardial ischemic events in patients with an anomalous left circumflex artery.
3.A Case of Early Repair of Ventricular Septal Perforation due to Blunt Chest Trauma.
Takeshi Ikuta ; Shigefumi Suehiro ; Toshihiko Shibata ; Yasuyuki Sasaki ; Hidekazu Hirai ; Tadahiro Murakami ; Mitsuharu Hosono ; Hiromichi Fujii ; Takanobu Aoyama ; Hiroaki Kinoshita
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2002;31(3):221-223
We report a 25-year-old man with ventricular septal perforation due to blunt chest trauma. He was transferred by ambulance to our hospital following a traffic accident. On admission, he had no cardiac murmur. Two days later, a pansystolic murmur appeared over the left lower sternal border. Doppler echocardiogram revealed a large left-to-right shunt through a ventricular septal perforation. We postponed surgical treatment as long as possible because he also exhibited bronchial bleeding due to a lung contusion. Surgical repair of the ruptured ventricular septum was performed 8 days after the chest trauma, because the pulmonary to systemic flow ratio was elevated to 4.6 and cardiac function had deteriorated. During the operation, the site of the septal perforation was easily detected by epicardial echocardiography. A 4-cm tear in the muscular septum was closed through a right ventriculotomy using a pericardial patch reinforced with a Dacron patch. Postoperative recovery was uneventful with the exception of transient right ventricular failure. There was no residual shunt.
4.Mitral Valve Repair for Failed MitraClip: a Case Report
Shintaro KUWAUCHI ; Mitsuharu HOSONO ; Tomohiko UETSUKI ; Masato OHNO ; Hideki SAKASHITA ; Takayuki OKADA ; Nobuya ZEMPO ; Naoki MINATO ; Kohei KAWAZOE
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2023;52(6):396-400
The patient was an 89-year-old male who underwent transcatheter edge-to-edge repair to the mitral valve using MitraClip for severe degenerative mitral regurgitation (MR) one year earlier. Although two clips were implanted, grade III/IV MR still remained. As his heart failure progressed, he was referred to us for surgery. The patient also had aortic stenosis. He underwent mitral valve repair and aortic valve replacement. The postoperative course was uneventful. He was transferred to the referring hospital on postoperative day 14. When performing MitraClip for degenerative MR, it is important to consider carefully not only the operative risk for open surgery but also the anatomical adequacy of MitraClip. When MitraClip fails to control MR, early surgical intervention should be considered.
5.Use of VIABAHN Stent Graft for Subclavian Artery Injury due to Inadvertent Catheter Placement
Shintaro KUWAUCHI ; Nobuya ZEMPO ; Hideki SAKASHITA ; Tomohiko UETSUKI ; Naoki TANIGUCHI ; Takayuki OKADA ; Mitsuharu HOSONO ; Shinya KANEMOTO ; Kohei KAWAZOE ; Naoki MINATO
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2020;49(2):86-89
A 77-year-old man presenting with uremic acidosis was referred to our department for a misplaced vascular access catheter. Computed tomography revealed the catheter was passing through the subclavian artery and terminating in the ascending aorta. Under angio-fluoroscopic monitoring, a VIABAHN stent graft was deployed immediately after removing the catheter. The patient had no hemorrhagic complication although continuous hemodiafiltration was started just after surgery. His postoperative course was uneventful.