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Congenital heart disease
Chapter by: Galloway AC; Colvin SB; Spencer FC
in: Principles of surgery by Schwartz SI; Shires GT [Eds]
New York : McGraw-Hill, 1993
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0070559287
CID: 3824
Diseases of great vessels
Chapter by: Galloway AC; Colvin SB; Spencer FC
in: Principles of surgery by Schwartz SI; Shires GT [Eds]
New York : McGraw-Hill, 1993
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0070559287
CID: 3823
Acquired heart disease
Chapter by: Galloway AC; Colvin SB; Spencer FC
in: Principles of surgery by Schwartz SI; Shires GT [Eds]
New York : McGraw-Hill, 1993
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0070559287
CID: 3825
Coronary artery bypass
Chapter by: Spencer FC; Galloway AC; Colvin SB
in: Principles of surgery by Schwartz SI; Shires GT [Eds]
New York : McGraw-Hill, 1993
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0070559287
CID: 3826
The effects of different techniques of internal mammary artery harvesting on sternal blood flow
Parish MA; Asai T; Grossi EA; Esposito R; Galloway AC; Colvin SB; Spencer FC
We investigated chest wall blood flow in a canine model to determine if the technique used to harvest the mammary artery has a differential effect on residual chest wall blood flow. Eight dogs underwent bilateral internal mammary artery mobilization; one artery was harvested as a pedicle and the other was harvested as a skeletonized vessel. Residual blood flow to the chest wall distribution of each artery was measured with radioactive microspheres. Chest wall blood flow was significantly decreased from preharvest levels after internal mammary artery mobilization regardless of the technique used. Tissue blood flows decreased to 46.9%, 22.1%, and 41.2% of baseline values for the manubrium (p < 0.01), sternum (p < 0.001), and ribs (p < 0.05), respectively. Residual sternal blood flow on the side of the skeletonized vessel was significantly greater than on the side of the pedicle graft (2.60 +/- 0.68 versus 1.27 +/- 0.27 cm3/min/100 gm, p < 0.001). We conclude that minimization of tissue mobilization during internal mammary artery harvesting may reduce sternal devascularization. This finding may have clinical significance with respect to lowering the incidence of sternal wound complications in coronary bypass surgery using the internal mammary artery as a bypass conduit
PMID: 1434710
ISSN: 0022-5223
CID: 13375
Treatment of AIDS-related bronchopleural fistula by pleurectomy [see comments] [Comment]
Crawford BK; Galloway AC; Boyd AD; Spencer FC
Spontaneous pneumothorax in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) may require prolonged therapy for treatment of a persistent bronchopleural fistula, and treatment by standard methods often fails. This pilot study was done to test the effectiveness of aggressive surgical therapy for definitive treatment of persistent bronchopleural fistula in patients with AIDS. Between March 1989 and September 1991, 44 patients with AIDS were treated for spontaneous pneumothorax with closed tube thoracostomy; 14 of these patients had development of persistent bronchopleural fistula for more than 10 days, and 2 patients had subsequent bronchopleural fistula on the opposite side. Operative therapy in 14 patients included 15 thoracotomies and one sternotomy. The bronchopleural fistula was closed directly with suture or staples in 15 procedures and resected by lobectomy in 1 patient. All 14 patients received adjuvant parietal pleurectomy. Operative mortality was 7% (1 of 14 patients). The fistula was closed in all survivors and 13 patients were discharged between 7 and 28 days postoperatively. Pathologic examination confirmed Pneumocystis carinii in 13 patients with a high incidence of diffuse involvement and subpleural necrosis, further demonstrating the need for pleurectomy. These data suggest that in selected patients bronchopleural fistulas associated with AIDS can be effectively controlled by surgical closure combined with pleurectomy
PMID: 1637207
ISSN: 0003-4975
CID: 13482
Surgical implications of transesophageal echocardiography to grade the atheromatous aortic arch
Ribakove GH; Katz ES; Galloway AC; Grossi EA; Esposito RA; Baumann FG; Kronzon I; Spencer FC
Stroke is an especially serious complication of cardiopulmonary bypass with an incidence of 2% to 5%. This prospective study used transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) in 97 patients more than 65 years of age (mean age, 73 years) to identify those at high risk for aortic atheroemboli. The atheromatous disease of the aorta was graded by TEE: grade I = minimal intimal thickening (n = 29); II = extensive intimal thickening (n = 33); III = sessile atheroma (n = 15); IV = protruding atheroma (n = 10); V = mobile atheroma (n = 10). Clinical evaluation was also performed by intraoperative aortic palpation. Four patients who were graded as having normal aortas by palpation had intraoperative strokes. In contrast, 3 of these 4 patients were in grade V on TEE. The relationship of TEE to incidence of stroke was statistically significant (p less than 0.006), whereas there was no significant correlation between clinical grade and stroke incidence. Four of 10 TEE grade V patients were treated with hypothermic circulatory arrest and aortic arch debridement, and none suffered strokes. The other 6 patients were treated with standard techniques, and 3 had strokes. These results suggest that patients with mobile atheromatous disease are at high risk for embolic strokes that are not predicted by routine clinical evaluation. Selective use of circulatory arrest in the presence of TEE-detected mobile arch atheromas may reduce the risk of intraoperative stroke
PMID: 1570966
ISSN: 0003-4975
CID: 13614
Multiple valve operation for advanced valvular heart disease: results and risk factors in 513 patients [published erratum appears in J Am Coll Cardiol 1992 Jun;19(7):1677-8]
Galloway AC; Grossi EA; Baumann FG; LaMendola CL; Crooke GA; Harris LJ; Colvin SB; Spencer FC
To assess the results and incremental risk factors affecting outcome after multiple-valve operation in the early blood cardioplegia era of cardiac surgery, follow-up data (mean +/- SD 3.1 +/- 2 years) were obtained on 97% of 513 patients (mean age +/- SD 58.8 +/- 10.5 years) who underwent a multiple-valve procedure between June 1976 and August 1985. Preoperatively 41% of patients were in New York Heart Association functional class III and 54% in class IV. Three groups accounted for 98.6% of the patients: 57.7% had an aortic and mitral valve procedure, 29% had a mitral and tricuspid valve procedure and 11.9% had a triple-valve procedure. The overall hospital mortality rate was 12.5% and overall 5-year survival rate was 67.1%. Hazard function analysis for all deaths revealed systolic pulmonary artery pressure (p less than 0.0001), age (p = 0.005), triple valve procedure (p less than 0.005), concomitant coronary bypass operation (p less than 0.005) and prior cardiac surgery (p less than 0.002) as the significant incremental risk factors predicting decreased survival in the early hazard phase; diabetes (p less than 0.005) predicted decreased survival in the late hazard phase. Postoperatively the condition of 80% of the patients improved to functional class I or II; only 0.6% remained in functional class IV. The 5-year rate of freedom from late combined valve-related morbidity was 81.7% and that of freedom from late combined valve-related morbidity and mortality was 71.7%. These results demonstrate excellent clinical improvement and late survival after multiple valve operation in patients with advanced valvular heart disease, justifying aggressive surgical therapy in these patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
PMID: 1545066
ISSN: 0735-1097
CID: 13657
Experience with twenty-eight cases of systolic anterior motion after mitral valve reconstruction by the Carpentier technique
Grossi EA; Galloway AC; Parish MA; Asai T; Gindea AJ; Harty S; Kronzon I; Spencer FC; Colvin SB
Systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve with left ventricular outflow tract obstruction after Carpentier-type mitral reconstruction with ring annuloplasty has led some surgeons to abandon an otherwise successful repair or to avoid use of a rigid ring. To assess the long-term significance of such motion, we studied 439 patients undergoing Carpenter mitral reconstruction at our institution between March 1981 and June 1990. The hospital mortality rate was 4.8% (21/439) overall and 3.7% (9/243) for isolated mitral reconstruction. Systolic anterior motion was found in 6.4% (28/438) after the operation, and 2.3% (10/438) had a coexisting left ventricular outflow tract gradient (mean 53 mm Hg). Of the 28 patients with systolic anterior motion, 27 (96.4%) had leaflet prolapse, 17 (60.7%) had undergone more than a 3 cm resection of the posterior leaflet, and two (7.1%) had preexisting idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis. All patients were treated medically, 14 with negative inotropic agents. Follow-up echocardiograms at a mean of 32 months demonstrated the disappearance of systolic anterior motion in 13 of 28 patients (46.4%) and resolution of the outflow tract gradient in 10 of 10 (100%). At follow-up only one patient was in New York Heart Association class III or IV and required reoperation for rheumatic mitral insufficiency. These data demonstrate that systolic anterior motion after Carpentier mitral reconstruction with ring annuloplasty is not prevalent and should be managed medically in most cases. Associated left ventricular outflow tract obstruction resolves with medical treatment
PMID: 1545545
ISSN: 0022-5223
CID: 13676
Results of urgent or emergency repair for symptomatic infants under one year of age with single or multiple ventricular septal defect
Danilowicz D; Presti S; Colvin S; Galloway A; Langsner A; Doyle EF
PMID: 1536125
ISSN: 0002-9149
CID: 13683