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Title: [Results of emergency bypass operation following percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty]. Author: Sievers B, Schofer J, Kalmar P, Krebber HJ, Bleifeld W. Journal: Z Kardiol; 1991 Aug; 80(8):506-11. PubMed ID: 1950073. Abstract: Between 1980 and 1988, percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) was performed in 1,514 patients. Fifty-five patients (3.6%) underwent emergency coronary bypass surgery because of an acute occlusion of the vessel or a dissection with sustained angina and signs of ischemia on the electrocardiogram. Twenty-five of these 55 patients had a myocardial infarction and 5 patients died, 3 perioperatively, 2 after hospital discharge. The degree of stenosis of the dilated vessel significantly influenced the incidence of infarction, while left ventricular ejection fraction prior to PTCA significantly influenced mortality. Patients who underwent surgery with an occluded vessel experienced myocardial infarction significantly more often (87%) than patients with a patent vessel (24%). The incidence of infarction was 27% when reperfusion of the vessel occluded during PTCA was achieved with a reperfusion catheter, repeated PTCA or intracoronary lysis. The patients' age, presence of unstable angina, left ventricular ejection fraction prior to PTCA, the dilated vessel, the extent of coronary artery disease, collateralization of the dilated vessel, and the time between the onset of the event necessitating bypass surgery and the beginning of extracorporeal circulation were found to have no influence on the incidence of infarction. Patients who died had a significantly lower ejection fraction before PTCA than survivors and all patients who died had experienced a large perioperative myocardial infarction.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]