The Feasibility and Early Results of Multivessel Minimally Invasive Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting for All Comers

Author:

Demirsoy Ergun1ORCID,Mavioglu Ilhan2ORCID,Dogan Emre1,Gulmez Harun1,Dindar Ismet3,Erol Mustafa Kemal3

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Sisli Kolan International Hospital, Kaptanpaşa Mahellesi Darulaceze Caddesi No 14, Sisli, 34384 Istanbul, Turkey

2. Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Private Practice, Sisli, 34394 Istanbul, Turkey

3. Division of Cardiology, Sisli Kolan International Hospital, 34384 Istanbul, Turkey

Abstract

Objectives: Cardiovascular surgery advancements have emerged with various minimally invasive approaches for treating multivessel coronary disease to improve outcomes and minimize the burden associated with conventional cardiac surgery. We present our clinical experience and minimally invasive coronary bypass techniques through minithoracotomy, which we apply without selection to patients who have decided to have elective surgery for multivessel isolated coronary artery disease. Methods: It consists of 230 consecutive patients operated by the same team with this method between July 2020 and September 2022. The patients were assigned to one of the two methods preoperatively to their accompanying comorbidities and operated on either with blood cardioplegia via 5 to 7 cm left anterior minithoracotomy, with on-pump clamped technique or without pump via left anterolateral minithoracotomy. Results: Mortality was observed in two of our patients (0.9%), but myocardial infarction was not observed in our patients in the early postoperative period. None of our patients required conversion to sternotomy (0%). Five patients’ needed reoperation from the same incision due to postoperative bleeding (2.2%), and atrial fibrillation developed in 17 patients in the postoperative period (7.4%). The mean number of bypasses was found to be 3.0 ± 0.9. Conclusions: Minimally invasive coronary artery bypass surgery via minithoracotomy can be routinely reproduced safely. More long-term results and more multicenter studies are needed for more widespread acceptance of the technique.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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