1. Combining Ultrafast Anaesthesia and Minimal Invasive Implantation in HeartMate 3: A Pilot Study
- Author
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R. Zayat, Ajay Moza, Heike Schnoering, G. Schaelte, Usaama Ahmad, Mohammad Amen Khattab, L. Twarie, Ruediger Autschbach, A. Haneya, and O. Allham
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Inotrope ,Mechanical ventilation ,Transplantation ,Multivariate analysis ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Convalescence ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Hemodynamics ,Median sternotomy ,Anesthesia ,Respiratory morbidity ,Medicine ,Surgery ,Thoracotomy ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Purpose Minimally invasive implantation of left ventricular assist devices (MIC-LVAD) is believed to imply several benefits, like less right heart failure (RHF), low respiratory morbidity, and faster convalescence. Additionally, there is some evidence thatultrafast track anaesthesia (UFTA) is associated with fewer postoperative complications. In this study we present our MIC-UFTA approach in HeartMate3 implantation in comparison to the conventional technique through median sternotomy (CS). Methods We reviewed the midterm outcome of 45 patients who underwent HeartMate3 implantation in two European centres between January, 2016 and 2019. Since February 2018 we changed our LVAD management and aimed to perform the MIC-UFTA approach in all LVAD candidates. We compared our first 15 HM3-patients receiving MIC-UFTA with left-right mini-anterolateral thoracotomy (n = 15) with our last CS HM3-patient (n = 30). Results Mean age was 61±7years. All patients in the MIC-UFTA group had successful extubation in the OR. Median duration of mechanical ventilation in the CS group was 62h (max.144h, min. 6h). Multivariate analysis revealed statistically significant reduction in ICU-stay, days on inotropes and total hospital LOS in the MIC-UFTA (p Conclusion The MIC-UFTA strategy can be utilized as a safe approach for patients undergoing HM3 implantation. The MIC-UFTA is associated with lower postoperative complications and better hemodynamic performance in the early postoperative period. Further large collaborative studies are needed to confirm advantages of MIC-UFTA approach.
- Published
- 2020
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