1. Comparison of survival rate between coronary artery bypass surgery and angioplasty based on number of diseased coronary vessels
- Author
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Mostafa Bahremand, Alireza Rai, Nahid Salehi, Mohammad R. Saidi, Hashem Kazerani, Raheem Nanvaee, Amir hosein Hashemian, and Zahra Jalili
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Surgery ,Coronary artery bypass surgery ,surgical procedures, operative ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,Angioplasty ,Conventional PCI ,Coronary vessel ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,business ,Survival rate ,Artery - Abstract
This study has been conducted to compare one-year survival rate of patients who underwent coronary artery bypass sur- gery (CABG) vs. percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in general as well as considering the number of diseased coro- nary vessels. In this retrospective study, we reviewed the medical records of patients who underwent CABG (484 cases) or PCI (292 cases) at out university heart center from 2009 to 2012. The mortality and survival was compared between the two studied groups based on left ventricular function and number of diseased coronary vessels. Twenty-seven patients (5.57%) died in CABG group which was significantly higher than in PCI group (8 cases, 2.73%); P= 0.04. However, no significant dif- ference was observed regarding mortality between CABG and PCI groups in one- diseased vessel (5.15% vs. 2.22%, P= 0.28), two- diseased vessel (6.12% vs. 3.57%, P= 0.41), and three-vessel disease (5.41% vs.0, P= 0.4). Although PCI was associated with a better one-year survival rate compared to CABG, but number of the diseased coronary vessels did not af- fect survival rate significantly.
- Published
- 2014
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