Resection of an aneurysm of the abdominal aorta after coronary artery bypass surgery and reconstruction of the left ventricle (Dor) (clinical case and literature report)

2015 ◽  
pp. 53-57
Author(s):  
Valerij Arakelyan ◽  
Mikhail Alshibaya ◽  
Vasiliy Papitashvili ◽  
Natalia Bortnikova ◽  
I Siradze
2009 ◽  
Vol 91 (4) ◽  
pp. 330-335
Author(s):  
David R Lawrence ◽  
Rajael Somaskanthan ◽  
Matthew J Barnard ◽  
Miles Curtis ◽  
Bruce E Keogh

INTRODUCTION There are currently more than 20 risk-scoring systems that attempt to predict peri-operative mortality following coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG). All these scoring systems use objective criteria to assess operative risk. Angiographic data are currently not included in any of these systems. This pilot study assessed the value of coronary angiography in predicting peri-operative mortality following CABG. PATIENTS AND METHODS Fourteen patients who died following first-time isolated CABG surgery were identified. These were matched with 14 patients of similar age, sex, left ventricle function and European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation (EuroSCORE). A panel of 25 clinicians were given details of the patients' age, sex, diabetic status, family history, smoking history, hypertensive status, lipid status, pre-operative symptoms, left ventricle ejection fraction and weight and shown the coronary angiograms of the patient. They were asked to predict the outcome following CABG for each patient. RESULTS Receiver operator characteristic curves were constructed and the area under the curves calculated and analysed using a commercially available statistical package (PRISM). The area under the curve for the group was 0.6820 for the group. Consultant clinicians achieved an area of 0.6789 versus their trainees 0.6844 (P = NS). The cardiologists achieved an area of 0.7063 versus the cardiothoracic surgeons 0.6491 (P = NS). CONCLUSIONS Despite the EuroSCORE predicting equal risk for the two groups of patients, it would appear that clinicians are able to identify individual higher risk patients by assessing pre-operatively the quality of the patient' coronary vasculature. Although the clinicians were able to predict individual patient mortality better than the EuroSCORE, the area under the curve indicates that it is not a robust method and clinicians, with all the clinical information to hand, are only moderately good at predicting the outcome following coronary artery bypass surgery.


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