Coronary angiography is the reference method for the detection of coronary disease of the cardiac grafts which threatens the long-term prognosis of cardiac transplantation. The primary results of ...treatment for slowing, stabilising or even improving coronary transplant disease are encouraging and make necessary the development and evaluation of reliable diagnostic methods. The authors undertook a prospective study of 48 asymptomatic patients with normal graft wall motion between January 1995 and March 1997 to compare the results of coronary angiography and endocoronary ultrasonography. The patients had been transplanted in the 10 years preceding the study. The results of the two methods were concordant in 33 cases (69%) (NS), for the confirmation (9 cases) or the information of coronary transplant disease (24 cases). The results were contradictory in 15 cases (31%): in 12 cases, endocoronary ultrasonography showed signs of coronary disease whereas the coronary angiography was estimated to be normal: in the remaining 3 cases, coronary angiography was abnormal but no signs of coronary disease were found on endocoronary ultrasonography. The specificity of coronary angiographic detection was 89% and therefore very satisfactory, but its sensitivity (43%) was poor. In addition, endocoronary ultrasonography allows analysis of the extension of coronary lesions to unstenosed segments, the quantification of intimal thickening. Therefore, endocoronary ultrasonography should become the reference investigation for coronary disease of cardiac transplants.
Cardiac transplantation remains the standard treatment for severe cardiomyopathy resistant to medical therapy. However, new techniques may help to put this off. Two patients with dilated ...cardiomyopathy were treated surgically since October 1996, one aged 48 and the other 52. They were in NYHA Class IV and one was dependent on inotropic drugs. Both had relative or absolute contra-indications to transplantation. The left ventricular end diastolic dimensions were over 70 mm with mild mitral regurgitation and fractional shortening of less than 12%. Coronary angiography was normal. They were operated in October 1996 and January 1997. The procedure consisted of correction of mitral regurgitation (annuloplasty) and of reduction of left ventricular volume by a triangular resection from the apese to the base of the heart. At histological examination, the resected myocardium measured 11 to 13 cm long and 5 to 7 cm at its base. The two patients were discharged from hospital after 45 and 30 days. There were no clinical signs of cardiac failure. Follow-up investigations showed a marked decrease in ventricular volumes, the end diastolic dimensions changing from 70 to 52 mm in the first, and from 76 to 54 mm in the second patient. The corresponding values of fractional shortening increased from 11 to 20% and from 6 to 17%. Left ventricular volumes decreased from 328 mL (end diastole) and 259 mL (end systole) to 140 mL and 74 mL in the first case, and from 300 mL (end diastole) and 280 mL (end systole) to 122 mL and 83 mL respectively in the second case. The ejection fraction increased from 20 to 40% and from 10 to 32%. These preliminary results show that the theoretical advantages of this surgical technique correspond to a practical reality. Larger series of patients are required to determine the optimal indications.
The authors report a case of giant cell myocarditis leading to rapidly progressive cardiac failure despite immuno-suppressor treatment in a 20 year old woman. The cardiac failure was successfully ...managed by implantation of a left ventricular assist device and then cardiac transplantation. The problems encountered underline the importance of accurate diagnosis by endomyocardial biopsy before undertaking treatment and the difficulties in the choice of appropriate method of assistance in this indication. Giant cell myocarditis is a rare cause of cardiac failure and should be considered in the differential diagnosis in view of its clinical features and risk of progression. The literature and the therapeutic implications are discussed.
From April 73 to June 94, 203 patients (167 men, 36 women) aged from 10 to 74 years (mean 44.8 +/- 15) underwent ascending aortic replacement with a composite graft for: dystrophic aneurysm (AN) (130 ...cases, 64.5%), chronic dissection (CD) (35 cases, 17.2%), type A acute dissection (AD) (38 cases, 19%). Forty-six patients (22.6%) suffered from Marfan syndrome (24 AN, 13 AD, 9 CD). Thirty patients (14.7%) had undergone a previous cardiac or aortic operation. The ascending aortic replacement was extended to the transverse arch in 28 patients (14%). A mechanical valve was used in 193 cases (95%). The technique of coronary reattachment has varied with time and according to the aortic lesions. The classic "Bentall" technique was used in 87 patients (43%), the "button" technique in 74 (36%), the "Cabrol" technique in 26 (13%) and a "mixed" technique in 16 cases (8%). The hospital mortality rate was 7.3% (15/203) (AN: 2.3%, CD: 11.4%, AD: 21%). The only predictors of hospital death were emergency AD (p < 0.03) and arch replacement (p < 0.02). Mean follow-up was 46 +/- 10 months (2-246). The overall long-term survival rate was (Kaplan Meier) 89 +/- 6% at 1 year, 77.9% at 5 years, 67.7 +/- 12% at 10 years and 61.3% +/- 15% at 12 years. The 10 years survival rate is significantly higher in patients with AN (77.8 +/- 11%) than in those with AD (61.6 +/- 17%) (Log.rank: p < 0.01). The late survival rate is also significantly higher after the "button" or Bentall reimplantation that after the "Cabrol" or "mixed" methods (90 +/- 5% in the "button" group and 88.7 +/- 6%, 83.8 +/- 9% and 76.6 +/- 12% in the "Bentall" group vs 80 +/- 18%, 63 +/- 21% and 58 +/- 35% in the "Cabrol" group at 1, 5 and 8 years, respectively). In conclusion, ascending aortic replacement with a composite graft is a safe procedure especially when performed electively in patients with dystrophic aneurysm or Marfan syndrome. The technique of coronary reimplantation has a significant on the long-term results.
Emergency cardiac transplantation Dubois, C; Dreyfus, G; de Lentdecker, P ...
Archives des maladies du coeur et des vaisseaux
89 Spec No 6
Journal Article
Emergency cardiac transplantation is a controversial subject in the present context of a lack of donor organs. There are few reports in the literature, which the authors review to suggest a practical ...approach which is clearly not consensual. The results in the literature report an extramortality of 10 to 30% if the indication of transplantation is that of an emergency. The poor results of emergency transplantation in the present day context of lack of donor organs have led the authors to abandon this indication. They only transplant patients in a stable condition without failure of organs other than the heart.
Between 1982 and 1992, 73 patients who had undergone cardiac transplantation and survived the hospital period, were followed up. The actuarial survival was 86%, 65% and 40% at 1, 5 and 7 years. The ...main causes of the 14 secondary deaths were infection (4), acute rejection (3) and cancer (3). Survival was complicated by acute rejection (1.07 episodes/patient), infection (0.7 episode/patient), cancer, hypertension and renal failure, graft dysfunction and other more secondary side effects. After analysing all the complications, the authors evaluated the quality of long-term survival after cardiac transplantation which allowed one patient out of two to return to normal living but with the threat of secondary graft dysfunction.
The authors, who have successfully performed thrombectomy of the pulmonary artery under extracorporeal circulation and deep hypothermia in three patients, wish to draw attention to the principal ...factors of success. The decision to operate, as accepted by most surgeons, rests on the patient's functional status (stage III or IV) and on the presence of a systolic pulmonary arterial pressure exceeding 50 mmHg. Deep hypothermia combined with circulatory arrest seems to be the best method, as it improves visual control, thereby avoiding damage to the endothelium or fracture of the distal thrombi during thrombectomy. Finally, a new approach route (severing of the superior pulmonary vein, opening of the pulmonary artery and use of Volmar-Sisteron strippers) makes it possible to remove the entire thrombus, thus obtaining an almost normal pressure in the pulmonary artery. In all three patients, the complications that are mostly due to intrabronchial haemorrhage by disruption of the endothelium, fracture of the distal thrombus or pulmonary artery contusion were avoided.