We herein report the case of a patient with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (Werlhof disease)... more We herein report the case of a patient with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (Werlhof disease) and coronary artery disease undergoing myocardial revascularization. The use of monomeric immunoglobulins, corticosteroids, platelets transfusion, use of a cell saver, normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass, aprotinine and homologous blood transfusion were combined in order to minimize the risk of bleeding complications in the postoperative period.
Intra-abdominal hemorrhage occurring while on cardio-pulmonary bypass (CPB) is a rare and potenti... more Intra-abdominal hemorrhage occurring while on cardio-pulmonary bypass (CPB) is a rare and potentially lethal event during coronary artery bypass procedures. We herein report an unusual case in which massive intra-abdominal bleeding during CPB originated from a previously undiagnosed ovarian tumor, leading to acute anemization and hemodynamic instability and requiring emergency gynecologic surgery.
We report one case in which chronic native competitive flow from an almost normal target coronary... more We report one case in which chronic native competitive flow from an almost normal target coronary artery did not influence IMA graft patency. This patient underwent control postoperative angiography 11 months after surgery and the mammary artery-left anterior descending graft was found to be normofunctioning despite the fact that the coronary artery showed no residual stenosis.
To evaluate the mid-term angiographic results of radial artery grafts used for myocardial revascu... more To evaluate the mid-term angiographic results of radial artery grafts used for myocardial revascularization. The first 68 consecutive surviving patients who received a radial artery graft proximally anastomosed to the aorta at our institution were restudied in a five-year follow-up (mean 59 +/- 6.5 months); 48 of these patients had already undergone an early angiographic examination. The response of the radial artery to the endovascular infusion of serotonin was evaluated one and five years after surgery and the mid-term status of the radial artery grafts was correlated with the degree of stenosis of the target vessel and with the Ca(++)-channel-blocker therapy. The patency and perfect patency rates of the radial artery five years after the operation were 91.9 and 87.0% respectively. All radial artery grafts that were patent early after surgery remained patent at mid-term follow-up and in seven patients early parietal irregularities disappeared after five years. The early propensity...
To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of tepid perfusion and isothermic blood cardioplegia in ... more To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of tepid perfusion and isothermic blood cardioplegia in coronary surgery. We studied 200 patients undergoing myocardial revascularization: 100 procedures were performed with moderate systemic hypothermia (28 degrees C) and cold crystalloid cardioplegia (4 degrees C); the other 100 patients received tepid systemic perfusion (TP) (34 degrees C) and intermittent blood cardioplegia at the same temperature according to the minicardioplegia technique (Group 2). The two groups were comparable with regards to age, extent of disease, preoperative left ventricular function and extra-corporeal circulation (ECC) time. In the tepid group we observed a higher incidence of spontaneous resumption of cardiac rhythm at cross-clamp removal compared to the hypothermic group (93% vs 34%; p<0.001). No difference was found in cardiac index at specified intervals, myocardial enzymes, inotrope requirements, arrhythmias, need for vasopressors and postoperative bloo...
Minimally invasive direct coronary artery by-pass (MIDCAB) has been proposed as an alternative te... more Minimally invasive direct coronary artery by-pass (MIDCAB) has been proposed as an alternative technical solution in different clinical settings. However, a systematic angiographic study of the results obtained using this new technique has not been published yet. This paper summarizes our preliminary angiographic results with MIDCAB. From January 1995 to January 1997, 56 patients underwent MIDCAB. All patients were followed up regularly and underwent stress myocardial scintigraphy. A postoperative angiographic control was performed in 48 patients (87.2% of the total) at a mean postoperative interval of 1.7 +/- 2 months. One patient died in hospital. Five patients required further surgery using conventional techniques (either surgical or percutaneous). In 41/48 patients (85.4%), the mammary artery graft and the left anterior descending artery (LAD) were normal. In two cases, we found an anastomotic stenosis, in two cases there was a LAD lesion distal to the anastomosis (at the applic...
Cellular and molecular biology (Noisy-le-Grand, France), 1995
To study the short and long term effects of myocardial injury on sympathetic nerve fibers, a necr... more To study the short and long term effects of myocardial injury on sympathetic nerve fibers, a necrotizing lesion was performed on the diaphragmatic side of rat myocardium by freeze-thawing. Animals were sacrificed at 2, 6, 18, 28 and 105 days after the surgical procedure and paraffin-embedded hearts were subjected to peroxidase immunohistochemistry. According to previous studies cardiac nerves were visualized by staining their surrounding Schwann cells with an anti-S100 protein antibody. Catecholaminergic axons were specifically identified by an anti-tyrosine hydroxylase antibody. No S-100 positive structures were found in 2-day lesions (denervation). Starting from day 6,S-100 positive structures became progressively more evident (reinnervation) and persisted up to day 105. Many of these newly formed nerve fibers were positive for tyrosine hydroxylase, indicating that a necrotic injury of rat myocardium causes a disappearance of sympathetic innervation which is followed by a phase of...
Transactions of the Medical Society of London, 1969
Between 1975 en 1988, 16 patients underwent pulmonary embolectomy because of massive pulmonary em... more Between 1975 en 1988, 16 patients underwent pulmonary embolectomy because of massive pulmonary embolism. Three of these patients, in whom shock and cardiac arrest had occurred prior to operation, died. The role of surgery in the treatment of massive pulmonary embolism is a topical issue, also in view of the rise of thrombolytic therapy and its acceptable results. For patients whose haemodynamic condition deteriorates in spite of thrombolytic treatment and for patients in whom thrombolytic therapy is contraindicated, pulmonary embolectomy remains an effective form of treatment.
This article reviews the potential application of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) tech... more This article reviews the potential application of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) technology to cardiopulmonary resuscitation for in and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and discusses the current evidence on the subject. The possible strategies for organ protection during ECMO and the concept of ECMO networks are also reviewed.
The radial artery (RA) is being employed as coronary artery bypass graft with good results, but w... more The radial artery (RA) is being employed as coronary artery bypass graft with good results, but when it is proximally anastomosed to the ascending aorta, undergoes substantial hemodynamic changes which could lead to significant graft intimal hyperplasia. The aim of this study was to investigate the evolution of RA graft morphology over time. We studied 20 patients with a perfectly patent RA graft at both 1 and 5 year angiography after coronary artery bypass graft. Both RA graft and grafted coronary artery diameters, assessed by quantitative coronary angiography, significantly increased at 5 years, in comparison to 1 year angiography (2.08 +/- 0.45 vs 2.54 +/- 0.53 mm, +22%, p &lt; 0.001 and 1.92 +/- 0.47 vs 2.18 +/- 0.41 mm, +13.3%, p &lt; 0.001, respectively). Hemodynamic changes following RA employment for coronary artery bypass graft stimulate a remodeling of RA graft itself and of the grafted coronary arteries. The progressive increase of diameters observed in RA grafts strongly argues against the development of flow-limiting graft intimal hyperplasia when RA is proximally anastomosed to the ascending aorta. Moreover, grafted coronary artery dilation suggests that hemorrheologic changes following coronary artery bypass graft could play a major role in the development of RA remodeling over time.
Italian heart journal. Supplement : official journal of the Italian Federation of Cardiology, 2002
The aim of this study was to determine the course of the main inflammatory and fibrinolytic marke... more The aim of this study was to determine the course of the main inflammatory and fibrinolytic markers in patients undergoing primary elective coronary artery bypass graft with extracorporeal circulation. One hundred and thirteen patients (105 males, 8 females) undergoing primary isolated coronary artery bypass with normo- (37 degrees C) or hypothermic (26 degrees C) systemic perfusion were prospectively studied. The clinical course of the patients was recorded and inflammatory and fibrinolytic markers (C-reactive protein, fibrinogen, interleukin-6, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, platelets and white blood cell counts) were determined before surgery, 24, 48 and 72 hours thereafter, and at hospital discharge. Two patients died (mortality 1.7%) and 6 had a major complication (event free survival > 94%). Interleukin-6, lymphocyte, neutrophil and monocyte levels increased after surgery but returned to normal at hospital dischar...
The purpose of this research was to investigate the in vivo morphofunctional changes induced in t... more The purpose of this research was to investigate the in vivo morphofunctional changes induced in the radial artery (RA) by its use as coronary artery bypass conduit by comparing the morphological features and vasoreactivity of the native RA versus the coronary RA graft in the same patient. Ten years after surgery, 10 patients were submitted to intravascular ultrasound examination of the RA graft of the controlateral (in situ) RA and of the internal thoracic artery (ITA) graft and to vasoactive challenges with acetylcholine and serotonin. Quantitative angiographic assessment showed that the mean diameter of the RA coronary grafts was significantly larger than that of the in situ RA and of the ITA (2.89+/-0.40 mm RA grafts, 2.14+/-0.52 mm in situ RA, 2.25+/-0.53 mm ITA grafts; P<0.001). The in situ RA demonstrated a typical muscular architecture, whereas RA coronary grafts showed a clear reduction of the thickness of the medial layer and had a less well-defined muscular component of...
In patients who develop in-stent restenosis, successful revascularization can be difficult to ach... more In patients who develop in-stent restenosis, successful revascularization can be difficult to achieve using percutaneous methods. This study was designed to verify the surgical results in this setting and to evaluate the potential beneficial role of arterial bypass conduits. Sixty consecutive coronary artery bypass patients with previous in-stent restenosis and 60 control cases were randomly assigned to receive an arterial conduit (either right internal thoracic or radial artery; study group) or a great saphenous vein graft (control group) on the first obtuse marginal artery to complete the surgical revascularization procedure. At a mean follow-up of 52+/-11 months, patients were reassessed clinically and by angiography. Freedom from clinical and instrumental evidence of ischemia recurrence was found in 19 of 60 subjects in the study group versus 45 of 60 in the control series (P=0.01). The results of the arterial grafts were excellent in both the study and control groups (right int...
We herein report the case of a patient with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (Werlhof disease)... more We herein report the case of a patient with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (Werlhof disease) and coronary artery disease undergoing myocardial revascularization. The use of monomeric immunoglobulins, corticosteroids, platelets transfusion, use of a cell saver, normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass, aprotinine and homologous blood transfusion were combined in order to minimize the risk of bleeding complications in the postoperative period.
Intra-abdominal hemorrhage occurring while on cardio-pulmonary bypass (CPB) is a rare and potenti... more Intra-abdominal hemorrhage occurring while on cardio-pulmonary bypass (CPB) is a rare and potentially lethal event during coronary artery bypass procedures. We herein report an unusual case in which massive intra-abdominal bleeding during CPB originated from a previously undiagnosed ovarian tumor, leading to acute anemization and hemodynamic instability and requiring emergency gynecologic surgery.
We report one case in which chronic native competitive flow from an almost normal target coronary... more We report one case in which chronic native competitive flow from an almost normal target coronary artery did not influence IMA graft patency. This patient underwent control postoperative angiography 11 months after surgery and the mammary artery-left anterior descending graft was found to be normofunctioning despite the fact that the coronary artery showed no residual stenosis.
To evaluate the mid-term angiographic results of radial artery grafts used for myocardial revascu... more To evaluate the mid-term angiographic results of radial artery grafts used for myocardial revascularization. The first 68 consecutive surviving patients who received a radial artery graft proximally anastomosed to the aorta at our institution were restudied in a five-year follow-up (mean 59 +/- 6.5 months); 48 of these patients had already undergone an early angiographic examination. The response of the radial artery to the endovascular infusion of serotonin was evaluated one and five years after surgery and the mid-term status of the radial artery grafts was correlated with the degree of stenosis of the target vessel and with the Ca(++)-channel-blocker therapy. The patency and perfect patency rates of the radial artery five years after the operation were 91.9 and 87.0% respectively. All radial artery grafts that were patent early after surgery remained patent at mid-term follow-up and in seven patients early parietal irregularities disappeared after five years. The early propensity...
To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of tepid perfusion and isothermic blood cardioplegia in ... more To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of tepid perfusion and isothermic blood cardioplegia in coronary surgery. We studied 200 patients undergoing myocardial revascularization: 100 procedures were performed with moderate systemic hypothermia (28 degrees C) and cold crystalloid cardioplegia (4 degrees C); the other 100 patients received tepid systemic perfusion (TP) (34 degrees C) and intermittent blood cardioplegia at the same temperature according to the minicardioplegia technique (Group 2). The two groups were comparable with regards to age, extent of disease, preoperative left ventricular function and extra-corporeal circulation (ECC) time. In the tepid group we observed a higher incidence of spontaneous resumption of cardiac rhythm at cross-clamp removal compared to the hypothermic group (93% vs 34%; p<0.001). No difference was found in cardiac index at specified intervals, myocardial enzymes, inotrope requirements, arrhythmias, need for vasopressors and postoperative bloo...
Minimally invasive direct coronary artery by-pass (MIDCAB) has been proposed as an alternative te... more Minimally invasive direct coronary artery by-pass (MIDCAB) has been proposed as an alternative technical solution in different clinical settings. However, a systematic angiographic study of the results obtained using this new technique has not been published yet. This paper summarizes our preliminary angiographic results with MIDCAB. From January 1995 to January 1997, 56 patients underwent MIDCAB. All patients were followed up regularly and underwent stress myocardial scintigraphy. A postoperative angiographic control was performed in 48 patients (87.2% of the total) at a mean postoperative interval of 1.7 +/- 2 months. One patient died in hospital. Five patients required further surgery using conventional techniques (either surgical or percutaneous). In 41/48 patients (85.4%), the mammary artery graft and the left anterior descending artery (LAD) were normal. In two cases, we found an anastomotic stenosis, in two cases there was a LAD lesion distal to the anastomosis (at the applic...
Cellular and molecular biology (Noisy-le-Grand, France), 1995
To study the short and long term effects of myocardial injury on sympathetic nerve fibers, a necr... more To study the short and long term effects of myocardial injury on sympathetic nerve fibers, a necrotizing lesion was performed on the diaphragmatic side of rat myocardium by freeze-thawing. Animals were sacrificed at 2, 6, 18, 28 and 105 days after the surgical procedure and paraffin-embedded hearts were subjected to peroxidase immunohistochemistry. According to previous studies cardiac nerves were visualized by staining their surrounding Schwann cells with an anti-S100 protein antibody. Catecholaminergic axons were specifically identified by an anti-tyrosine hydroxylase antibody. No S-100 positive structures were found in 2-day lesions (denervation). Starting from day 6,S-100 positive structures became progressively more evident (reinnervation) and persisted up to day 105. Many of these newly formed nerve fibers were positive for tyrosine hydroxylase, indicating that a necrotic injury of rat myocardium causes a disappearance of sympathetic innervation which is followed by a phase of...
Transactions of the Medical Society of London, 1969
Between 1975 en 1988, 16 patients underwent pulmonary embolectomy because of massive pulmonary em... more Between 1975 en 1988, 16 patients underwent pulmonary embolectomy because of massive pulmonary embolism. Three of these patients, in whom shock and cardiac arrest had occurred prior to operation, died. The role of surgery in the treatment of massive pulmonary embolism is a topical issue, also in view of the rise of thrombolytic therapy and its acceptable results. For patients whose haemodynamic condition deteriorates in spite of thrombolytic treatment and for patients in whom thrombolytic therapy is contraindicated, pulmonary embolectomy remains an effective form of treatment.
This article reviews the potential application of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) tech... more This article reviews the potential application of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) technology to cardiopulmonary resuscitation for in and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and discusses the current evidence on the subject. The possible strategies for organ protection during ECMO and the concept of ECMO networks are also reviewed.
The radial artery (RA) is being employed as coronary artery bypass graft with good results, but w... more The radial artery (RA) is being employed as coronary artery bypass graft with good results, but when it is proximally anastomosed to the ascending aorta, undergoes substantial hemodynamic changes which could lead to significant graft intimal hyperplasia. The aim of this study was to investigate the evolution of RA graft morphology over time. We studied 20 patients with a perfectly patent RA graft at both 1 and 5 year angiography after coronary artery bypass graft. Both RA graft and grafted coronary artery diameters, assessed by quantitative coronary angiography, significantly increased at 5 years, in comparison to 1 year angiography (2.08 +/- 0.45 vs 2.54 +/- 0.53 mm, +22%, p &lt; 0.001 and 1.92 +/- 0.47 vs 2.18 +/- 0.41 mm, +13.3%, p &lt; 0.001, respectively). Hemodynamic changes following RA employment for coronary artery bypass graft stimulate a remodeling of RA graft itself and of the grafted coronary arteries. The progressive increase of diameters observed in RA grafts strongly argues against the development of flow-limiting graft intimal hyperplasia when RA is proximally anastomosed to the ascending aorta. Moreover, grafted coronary artery dilation suggests that hemorrheologic changes following coronary artery bypass graft could play a major role in the development of RA remodeling over time.
Italian heart journal. Supplement : official journal of the Italian Federation of Cardiology, 2002
The aim of this study was to determine the course of the main inflammatory and fibrinolytic marke... more The aim of this study was to determine the course of the main inflammatory and fibrinolytic markers in patients undergoing primary elective coronary artery bypass graft with extracorporeal circulation. One hundred and thirteen patients (105 males, 8 females) undergoing primary isolated coronary artery bypass with normo- (37 degrees C) or hypothermic (26 degrees C) systemic perfusion were prospectively studied. The clinical course of the patients was recorded and inflammatory and fibrinolytic markers (C-reactive protein, fibrinogen, interleukin-6, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, platelets and white blood cell counts) were determined before surgery, 24, 48 and 72 hours thereafter, and at hospital discharge. Two patients died (mortality 1.7%) and 6 had a major complication (event free survival > 94%). Interleukin-6, lymphocyte, neutrophil and monocyte levels increased after surgery but returned to normal at hospital dischar...
The purpose of this research was to investigate the in vivo morphofunctional changes induced in t... more The purpose of this research was to investigate the in vivo morphofunctional changes induced in the radial artery (RA) by its use as coronary artery bypass conduit by comparing the morphological features and vasoreactivity of the native RA versus the coronary RA graft in the same patient. Ten years after surgery, 10 patients were submitted to intravascular ultrasound examination of the RA graft of the controlateral (in situ) RA and of the internal thoracic artery (ITA) graft and to vasoactive challenges with acetylcholine and serotonin. Quantitative angiographic assessment showed that the mean diameter of the RA coronary grafts was significantly larger than that of the in situ RA and of the ITA (2.89+/-0.40 mm RA grafts, 2.14+/-0.52 mm in situ RA, 2.25+/-0.53 mm ITA grafts; P<0.001). The in situ RA demonstrated a typical muscular architecture, whereas RA coronary grafts showed a clear reduction of the thickness of the medial layer and had a less well-defined muscular component of...
In patients who develop in-stent restenosis, successful revascularization can be difficult to ach... more In patients who develop in-stent restenosis, successful revascularization can be difficult to achieve using percutaneous methods. This study was designed to verify the surgical results in this setting and to evaluate the potential beneficial role of arterial bypass conduits. Sixty consecutive coronary artery bypass patients with previous in-stent restenosis and 60 control cases were randomly assigned to receive an arterial conduit (either right internal thoracic or radial artery; study group) or a great saphenous vein graft (control group) on the first obtuse marginal artery to complete the surgical revascularization procedure. At a mean follow-up of 52+/-11 months, patients were reassessed clinically and by angiography. Freedom from clinical and instrumental evidence of ischemia recurrence was found in 19 of 60 subjects in the study group versus 45 of 60 in the control series (P=0.01). The results of the arterial grafts were excellent in both the study and control groups (right int...
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