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Off-Pump Minithoracotomy Versus Sternotomy for Left Anterior Descending Myocardial Bridge Unroofing

Authors :
Shari L. Miller
Simar S. Bajaj
Jennifer A. Tremmel
Camille E. Hironaka
Ian S. Rogers
Hanjay Wang
Jack H. Boyd
Christian T. O’Donnell
R. Scott Mitchell
Chad J. Abbot
Ingela Schnittger
Vedant S. Pargaonkar
Michael P. Fischbein
Yasuhiro Honda
Source :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery. 112:1474-1482
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Myocardial bridge (MB) of the left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery occurs in approximately 25% of the population. When medical therapy fails in patients with a symptomatic, hemodynamically significant MB, MB unroofing represents the optimal surgical management. Here, we evaluated minimally invasive MB unroofing in selected patients compared with sternotomy.MB unroofing was performed in 141 adult patients by sternotomy on-pump (ST-on, n = 40), sternotomy off-pump (ST-off, n = 62), or minithoracotomy off-pump (MT, n = 39). Angina symptoms were assessed preoperatively and 6 months postoperatively using the Seattle Angina Questionnaire. Matching included all MT patients and 31 ST-off patients with similar MB characteristics, no previous cardiac operations or coronary interventions, and no concomitant procedures.MT patients tended to have a shorter MB length than ST-on and ST-off patients (2.57 vs 2.93 vs 3.09 cm, P = .166). ST-on patients had a longer hospital stay than ST-off and MT patients (5.0 vs 4.0 vs 3.0 days, P .001), and more blood transfusions (15.2% vs 0.0% vs 2.6%, P = .002). After matching, MT patients had a shorter hospital stay than ST-off patients (3.0 vs 4.0 days, P = .005). No deaths or major complications occurred in any group. In all groups, MB unroofing yielded significant symptomatic improvement regarding physical limitation, angina stability, angina frequency, treatment satisfaction, and quality of life.We report our single-center experience of off-pump minimally invasive MB unroofing, which may be safely performed in carefully selected patients, yielding dramatic improvements in angina symptoms at 6 months after the operation.

Details

ISSN :
00034975
Volume :
112
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....12a668e09e59fd1e013821e3e6cca427