The Annals of thoracic surgery
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Adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) has a high mortality rate and consumes considerable health care resources. It is not clear whether specimens obtained from open lung biopsy (OLB) in ARDS provide a specific diagnosis, alter therapy, or affect outcome. This meta-analysis attempts to determine whether OLB is safe, provides a specific diagnosis, changes therapy, or affects survival. ⋯ OLB in ARDS is a potentially productive procedure that provides a specific diagnosis and leads to a change in management in high proportions of patients. ARDS has a high mortality rate, which OLB does not appear to increase. Owing to a lack of randomized controlled trials, a survival advantage of OLB in ARDS could not be demonstrated.
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Case Reports
Cost-effectiveness of initial diagnostic strategies for pulmonary nodules presenting to thoracic surgeons.
Patients presenting to thoracic surgeons with pulmonary nodules suggestive of lung cancer have varied diagnostic options including navigation bronchoscopy (NB), computed tomography-guided fine-needle aspiration (CT-FNA), (18)F-fluoro-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) and video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS). We studied the relative cost-effective initial diagnostic strategy for a 1.5- to 2-cm nodule suggestive of cancer. ⋯ Both NB and CT-FNA diagnostic strategies are more cost-effective than either VATS biopsy or FDG-PET scan to diagnose lung cancer in moderate- to high-risk nodules and resulted in fewer nontherapeutic operations when FDG-PET specificity was less than 72%. An FDG-PET scan for diagnosis of lung cancer may not be cost-effective in regions of the country where specificity is low.
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Three-patch repair of supravalvar aortic stenosis is a widely accepted surgical approach for this congenital heart lesion. We describe an unusual complication of this approach, which resulted in ischemia in the left anterior coronary artery distribution. Subtle oversizing of the left sinus of Valsalva patch led to kinking of the origin of the left anterior descending artery; the circumflex artery was not affected. Sinus of Valsalva reconstruction and reimplantation of the left coronary button restored normal coronary perfusion.
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Case Reports
Transcatheter aortic valve replacement for patients with aortic valve stenosis complicated with moyamoya disease.
Moyamoya disease (MMD) is a rare disease characterized by occlusive intracranial arteriopathy with formation of abnormal cerebrovascular collateral networks. Conventional cardiovascular surgical procedures using cardiopulmonary bypass for patients with MMD is challenging because low cerebral perfusion pressure and nonpulsatile (continuous) flow during cardiopulmonary bypass can cause severe cerebral ischemia. We successfully performed transcatheter aortic valve replacement in 3 women with severe aortic valve stenosis complicated with MMD. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement may be useful for patients with severe aortic valve stenosis complicated with severe cerebral ischemia, including MMD.