The Annals of thoracic surgery
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Comparative Study
Mediastinitis after pediatric cardiac surgery: a 15-year experience at a single institution.
The spectrum of sternal wound infections after cardiac surgery ranges from superficial infections to a deep sternal infection known as mediastinitis. Mediastinitis is a rare but clinically relevant source of postoperative morbidity and mortality in adult and pediatric patients after cardiac surgery. ⋯ Timely diagnosis, aggressive sternal debridement, and liberal use of rotational muscle flaps can potentially minimize the morbidity and mortality in pediatric postoperative cardiac patients. Subsequent redo-sternotomy has not been problematic.
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Surgical resection remains the mainstay of treatment for pulmonary malignancy. The ability of patients to undergo resection is dependent on the anatomic characteristics of the tumor, and the respiratory and cardiovascular status of the patient. There have been recent advances in our understanding of respiratory function in the patient with marginal lung function that have allowed surgical therapy of lung cancer in patients previously deemed inoperable. This review will define the marginal patients who can safely undergo pulmonary resection.
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Comparative Study
Comparison of stages I-II thymoma treated by complete resection with or without adjuvant radiation.
Adjuvant radiation after resection of Masaoka stage II thymoma is widely advocated, but the evidence supporting it is controversial. Studies addressing this issue generally report few patients and lump all patients beyond stage I together in the analysis. ⋯ These data support the contention that margin-negative surgical resection alone is sufficient treatment for both stages I and II thymoma.
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Comparative Study
Cerebral cortical oxygenation changes during OPCAB surgery.
We investigated the changes occurring in cerebral cortical oxygenation during off-pump coronary artery bypass (OPCAB) surgery using near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). ⋯ Grafting of the LAD on the beating heart is responsible for changes in cerebral cortical oxygenation which persist early after returning the heart to its natural position. Grafting of the Cx and PDA result in transient reversible changes. Trendelenburg positioning and right lateral tilting of the operating table during grafting of lateral and posterior walls might have a protective role in preventing cerebral cortical ischemia. Further studies are needed to assess the clinical importance of these observations.
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We plan to determine whether the cause of mitral valve regurgitation, ischemic or degenerative, affects survival after combined mitral valve repair or replacement and coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery and to assess the influence of residual mitral regurgitation on late outcome. ⋯ Survival after mitral valve surgery and CABG is determined by the extent of coronary disease and ventricular dysfunction and by the success of the valve procedure; etiology of mitral valve regurgitation has relatively little impact on late outcome.