4.Surgical Treatment of Aortic Aneurysms in Hemodialysis Patients.
Shin Yamamoto ; Shiro Sasaguri ; Yasuyuki Hosoda ; Kenji Takazawa ; Norio Kikuchi
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1994;23(6):433-436
Surgical treatment of two abdominal and two thoracic aneurysms in hemodialysis patients were performed from 1991 to 1993. Two elective cases survived, but two emergency cases died. The causes of death were PMI and respiratory failure. Ruptured aneurysms are critical and probably result in higher mortality and morbidity than elective replacement of aneurysms. In view of the documented risk of rupture and current operative risk, we believe that elective surgical treatment of aneurysm is a much better treatment than following the aneurysms until they produce symptoms or significantly enlarge.
5.A Case Report of Aortic Arch Replacement for Acute Dissection of Stanford Type A under 135 Minutes of Deep Hypothermic Circulatory Arrest Employing Retrograde Cerebral Perfusion.
Takashi Watanabe ; Yasuyuki Hosoda ; Shiro Sasaguri ; Shin Yamamoto
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1996;25(3):192-194
A 54-year-old male with sudden back pain was diagnosed as having acute aortic dissection of Stanford type A. He underwent an aortic arch replacement under the deep hypothermic circulatory arrest and retrograde cerebral perfusion. During retrograde cerebral perfusion, the central venous pressure was maintained at 20mmHg, the perfusion flow rate was 400ml/min and the lowest rectal temperature was 19°C. The duration of retrograde cerebral perfusion was 135 min, but the patient recovered successfully without any evidence of neurological complications. This report suggests that retrograde cerebral perfusion associated with deep hypothermic circulatory arrest has the possibility to prolong the safety time limit of antegrade cerebral circulatory arrest up to 135min.
6.Lower Mini-Sternotomy for Direct Coronary Artery Bypass on the Beating Heart.
Taira Yamamoto ; Yasuyuki Hosoda ; Shiro Sasaguri ; Kenji Takazawa ; Masahiro Goto ; Shiori Kawasaki ; Motoshige Yamasaki ; Hiroshi Sato ; Tomonobu Fukuda
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2000;29(1):21-24
Although left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) grafting with a left internal thoracic artery (ITA) on a beating heart via a small left anterior thoracotomy (LAST) has become widely accepted, significant limitations exist due to the limited surgeon experience, smallness of exposure, thus making harvesting of the ITA, visualization of the surgical field and anastomosis quite difficult. Patients often have significant pain and wound complications postoperatively. A lower mini-sternotomy approach in 4 patients was performed from December 1998 through January 1999. Results: The length of mini-sternotomy incision is 7 to 14cm. These operations were accomplished without morbidity or mortality. No patients required intraoperative conversion to conventional bypass. Postoperative angiography showed patency of graft without stenosis of the anastomosis in all 4 patients. The patients did not complain of significant pain and their postoperative hospital stay was 5 to 11 days. The lower mini-sternotomy approach or“xyphoid” approach proposed by Benetti seems to be an excellent novel approach giving the freedom of extension of the incision if needed with satisfactory exposure for left ITA harvest and access to LAD as well as the distal RCA, and causes less postoperative incisional pain.