The Annals of thoracic surgery
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Giant emphysematous bullae represent a rare form of emphysematous lung destruction. Surgical resection has traditionally been indicated when there is hyperexpansion of the chest, compromised pulmonary function, and evidence of underlying, relatively normal compressed lung. We review our experience and intermediate-term follow-up after the resection of giant bullae. ⋯ In a contemporary series, giant bullectomy is shown to produce significant immediate functional improvement. This benefit declines with time but persists at least 3 years.
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Spontaneous pneumomediastinum is a rare medical entity occurring almost exclusively in otherwise healthy young individuals without known predisposing factors. We reported our experience with patients presenting with spontaneous pneumomediastinum related to sports. ⋯ Spontaneous pneumomediastinum after sporting activities is a benign disease that generally resolves without clinical sequelae. Restriction of physical and athletic activity after the first episode is unnecessary, the only exception being that of scuba diving.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Bradykinin preconditioning in coronary artery bypass grafting.
Experimental studies have shown that activation of bradykinin B2 receptor is one of the most important triggers of ischemic preconditioning. However, the effect of exogenous administration of bradykinin in cardiac surgery is not yet known. The present prospective randomized study was designed to investigate the effect of bradykinin pretreatment in patients undergoing elective coronary artery bypass surgery. ⋯ Exogenous bradykinin infusion showed weak cardioprotective effect in the low-risk patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery but the dose used in the study caused acute decrease of systemic blood pressure.
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The outcome in patients treated surgically for coronary artery disease is known to be influenced by the extent of the disease. Whether this factor also has an effect in patients undergoing isolated minimally invasive revascularization of the left anterior descending (LAD) artery using the internal thoracic artery (ITA) (MIDCAB) has not been looked at. Thus, this study sought to evaluate the impact of multivessel disease (MVD) on midterm outcome after MIDCAB. ⋯ Patients with isolated disease of the LAD appear to benefit from ITA grafting in the form of a MIDCAB procedure. Here, it should be an approach of choice. The results show that MVD is an independent risk factor for outcome in patients undergoing a MIDCAB procedure. Nevertheless, the midterm morbidity and mortality in MVD patients after a MIDCAB procedure where the LAD is the only target vessel for interventional or surgical treatment is acceptable despite a higher morbidity than in SVD patients.
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Use of profoundly hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass may increase the risk of postoperative bleeding and lung and renal dysfunction. The aim of this study was to analyze postoperative blood loss and indices of pulmonary and renal dysfunction in patients undergoing proximal aortic surgery with and without the use of profound hypothermia to determine risk factors for nonneurologic morbidity. ⋯ Profound hypothermia may cause a coagulopathy, but procedure extent is the primary determinant of postoperative bleeding. Profoundly hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass does not appear to be a risk factor for renal or early pulmonary dysfunction or intensive therapy unit length of stay.