Selective cerebral perfusion via right axillary artery direct cannulation for aortic arch surgery

被引:28
|
作者
Strauch, JT [1 ]
Böhme, Y [1 ]
Franke, UFW [1 ]
Wittwer, T [1 ]
Madershahian, N [1 ]
Wahlers, T [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Jena, Dept Cardiothorac & Vasc Surg, D-07747 Jena, Germany
来源
THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGEON | 2005年 / 53卷 / 06期
关键词
aortic arch surgery; selective cerebral perfusion; axillary artery;
D O I
10.1055/s-2005-865762
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: The risk of neurological complications is still a life-threatening event for patients undergoing proximal aortic arch or total aortic arch surgery. To prevent these complications, axillary artery cannulation and antegrade selective cerebral perfusion were utilized. We compared the effects of using hypothermic circulatory arrest (HCA) alone or with selective cerebral perfusion (SCP/AX) via right side axillary artery direct cannulation. Methods: 120 patients, mean age 61 12 years (range 26 - 80), underwent proximal aortic or total aortic arch replacement between 1999 and 2004; 46 were female. We retrospectively compared the results of the two patient groups comparable for preoperative risk factors: 71 pts were operated using HCA beginning in 1999 and 49 pts using HCA/SCP via axillary artery direct cannulation since 2002. The indication for surgery was an aortic aneurysm in 80 (67%) patients and aortic dissection in 36 (30%) patients. The groups were well matched with regard to median age (60 vs. 62 yrs), urgency (emergent/urgent 36 vs. 44%; elective 64 vs. 65%), and several other known risk factors (p = ns). Results: Overall in-hospital mortality was 13%: 10% with HCA vs. 6% with SCP/AX. Permanent neurological dysfunction occurred in 10% with HCA vs. 6% with SCP/AX. Transient neurological dysfunction (TND) in patients surviving without stroke was lower with SCP/AX (10%) than with HCA (17%) (p = ns). Mean duration of HCA was 28 +/- 12 min when isolated HCA was used, and significantly shorter with 21 6 min when the combination of SCP/AX (p = 0.03) was used. Mean duration of CPB was 202 55 min with HCA vs. 192 50 min with SCP/AX (p = ns). Comparison of the groups who had comparable preoperative risk factors showed a trend towards lower in-hospital mortality, stroke and TND rates, a significant reduction in cardiac (p = 0.034), infectious (p = 0.025) and bleeding complications (p = 0.04) in SCP/AX compared with HCA, as well as a significantly shorter duration of hospitalization (p = 0.046) and shorter ICU stay (p = ns). Conclusion: Our results suggest that HCA/SCP is superior to HCA alone for preventing cerebral injury during operations on the aortic arch. By reducing embolic risk, as well as the duration of HCA, SCP with axillary artery direct cannulation may be the optimal technique for averting cerebral events, reducing complications, and shortening hospital stays following aortic arch repair.
引用
收藏
页码:334 / 340
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Direct innominate artery cannulation for selective antegrade cerebral perfusion during deep hypothermic circulatory arrest in aortic surgery Discussion
    Augoustides, John G.
    Desai, Nimesh D.
    Szeto, Wilson Y.
    Bavaria, Joseph E.
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2014, 148 (06): : 2924 - 2926
  • [32] Efficacy of right axillary artery perfusion for antegrade cerebral perfusion in open total arch repair
    Hiraoka, Arudo
    Chikazawa, Genta
    Totsugawa, Toshinori
    Tamura, Kentaro
    Sakaguchi, Taichi
    Nakajima, Kosuke
    Yoshitaka, Hidenori
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY, 2014, 60 (02) : 436 - 442
  • [33] Innominate Artery Cannulation and Antegrade Cerebral Perfusion for Aortic Arch Reconstruction in Infants and Children
    Nasirov, Teimour
    Mainwaring, Richard D.
    Reddy, V. Mohan
    Sleasman, Justin
    Margetson, Tristan
    Hanley, Frank L.
    WORLD JOURNAL FOR PEDIATRIC AND CONGENITAL HEART SURGERY, 2013, 4 (04) : 356 - 361
  • [34] Right axillary artery cannulation in acute type A aortic dissection with involvement of the right axillary artery
    Tong, Guang
    Zhao, Shuang
    Wu, Jinlin
    Sun, Zhongchan
    Zhuang, Donglin
    Chen, Zerui
    Liu, Yaorong
    Yang, Yongchao
    Fan, Ruixin
    Sun, Tucheng
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2024, 168 (01): : 50 - 59.e6
  • [35] Innominate Artery Graft Cannulation for Selective Antegrade Cerebral Perfusion in Aortic Surgery: Clinical Findings and Feasibility
    Turkmen, Ufuk
    Tekin, Kudret Atakan
    Yigit, Gorkem
    Celikten, Ayla Ece
    Unal, Ertekin Utku
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2025, 14 (06)
  • [36] Right Axillary Artery Cannulation in Aortic Valve Replacement
    Hosono, Mitsuharu
    Shibata, Toshihiko
    Murakami, Takashi
    Sakaguchi, Masanori
    Suehiro, Yasuo
    Suehiro, Shigefumi
    ANNALS OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2016, 22 (02) : 84 - 89
  • [37] Direct Axillary Artery Cannulation for Aortic Surgery: Lessons From Contemporary Experiences
    Ohira, Suguru
    Kai, Masashi
    Goldberg, Joshua B.
    Malekan, Ramin
    Lansman, Steven L.
    Spielvogel, David
    ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 2022, 114 (04): : 1341 - 1347
  • [38] Cerebral Protection for Aortic Arch Surgery: Mild Hypothermia With Selective Cerebral Perfusion
    Zierer, Andreas
    Moritz, Anton
    SEMINARS IN THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2012, 24 (02) : 123 - 126
  • [39] Direct Innominate Artery Cannulation for Antegrade Cerebral Perfusion in Neonates Undergoing Arch Reconstruction
    Amir, Gabriel
    Frenkel, Georgy
    Shukrun, Golan
    Gogia, Omar
    Bachar, Oren
    Bruckheimer, Elchanan
    Katz, Jacob
    Birk, Einat
    ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 2013, 95 (03): : 956 - 961
  • [40] Continuous cerebral and myocardial selective perfusion in neonatal aortic arch surgery
    Maminirina, Pierre
    Pavy, Carine
    Bourgoin, Pierre
    Baron, Olivier
    JOURNAL OF CARDIAC SURGERY, 2020, 35 (11) : 2920 - 2926