Surgical left atrial appendage closure: success rate and its relationship with cerebrovascular accident
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Published:2022-01-12
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ISSN:2717-011X
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Container-title:Current Journal of Neurology
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language:
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Short-container-title:CJN
Author:
Peighambari Mohammad Mahdi,Moradkarami Firoozeh,Sadeghpour Anita,Baharestani Bahador,Alizadeh-Ghavidel Alireza,Ghadrdoost Behshid,Etemadifar Masoud,Behjati Mohaddeseh
Abstract
Background: Several surgical procedures such as excision or exclusion are recommended for the closure of the left atrial appendage (LAA). This study was conducted with the aim to evaluate the success rate of different surgical techniques for LAA closure, their respective complications, and the rate of post-surgical cerebrovascular accident (CVA).
Methods: This retrospective study included 150 consecutive patients who underwent LAA closure most commonly after mitral valve surgery within 3 to 6 months after surgery. An expert echocardiographic fellow collected the data on patients’ surgical LAA closure methods and history of CVA, types of prosthetic valves, mortality, and bleeding.
Results: The failure rate for complete LAA closure was 36.7% (55 patients) in our study. The greatest success rate of complete LAA closure was seen in purse-string method (75.5%), followed by resection method (71.4%), while the lowest success rate (≈ 33.3%) was observed in ligation method. A significant relationship was observed between clots on the surface of metallic valve and postoperative CVA (P = 0.001; likelihood ratio: 32). significant relationship between partial LAA closure and the incidence of post-surgical CVA (P > 0.050).
Conclusion: We observed the highest success rate of complete LAA closure in purse-string method followed by resection method. Interestingly, our results showed that despite the higher rate of residual LAA clot in cases of partial LAA closure, the occurrence of post-surgical CVA was mostly related to the presence of clots on the surface of metallic mitral prostheses rather than the presence of partial LAA closure.
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology