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Ann Thorac Surg 2004;78:1831-1833
© 2004 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
a Department of Cardiac Surgery, Málaga, Spain
b Department of Cardiology, Virgen de la Victoria University Hospital, Málaga, Spain
Accepted for publication July 17, 2003.
* Address reprint requests to Dr Melero, Departamento de Cirugía Cardíaca, Hospital Universitario Virgen de la Victoria, Campus Universitario Teatinos, Málaga 29010, Spain
makjom{at}teleline.es
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| Introduction |
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| Case Reports |
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Patient 1
A 78-year-old man had an urgent operation on September 15, 2002, because of unstable angina and stenosis of the left main coronary artery and right coronary artery. Two saphenous vein grafts to the left anterior descending coronary artery and right coronary artery were placed. Two Symmetry Aortic Connector Systems for veins with external diameters of 4.5 to 5 mm (gray colored) were used to perform the proximal anastomoses. Flow measurements were 50 mL/min and 60 mL/min, respectively. The patient was discharged on postoperative day 10 with aspirin. Three months later the patient was readmitted for unstable angina and cardiogenic shock. Cardiac catheterization showed a subtotal stenosis of the proximal anastomosis of the SACS left anterior descending coronary artery venous graft. The vein graft to the right coronary artery was occluded, and the distal coronary was small. An emergent operation was performed on December 8, 2002, placing the left internal thoracic artery to the left anterior descending coronary artery using extracorporeal circulation. The patient was discharged free of angina on postoperative day 8.
Patient 2
An elective off-pump CABG was performed on August 10, 2002 on a 72-year-old man with high-grade angina and poor ejection fraction. The left internal thoracic artery was anastomosed to the left anterior descending coronary artery and a saphenous vein graft to a marginal branch of the circumflex artery performing the proximal anastomosis with a gray SACS (4.5 to 5 mm). Flow measurements were 40 mL/min for the internal thoracic artery and 50 mL/min for the vein graft. The postoperative course was uneventful, and the patient was discharged 5 days after surgical treatment with acetylsalicylic acid (100 mg/d). In January 2003, he had angina pectoris again, and cardiac catheterization showed a concentric and severe stenosis of the proximal anastomosis related to the nickel-titanium connector (Fig 1); the left internal thoracic artery was completely patent and without stenosis. An intravascular ultrasound study demonstrated a significant lumen loss attributable to anastomotic neointimal hyperplasia (Fig 2). The angina was controlled with medical treatment and the patient was discharged with aspirin plus clopidogrel (75 mg/d).
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We did not find any common risk factor in the 3 patients we reported. Only 1 of the 3 patients was diabetic and none had diffuse vascular disease or aortic wall disease. Our 3 patients had similar clinical features (ie, use of the smallest SCAS, intraoperative satisfactory flows measurements, uneventful postoperative course, anti-aggregative therapy only with acetylsalicylic acid, onset of angina several months after the CABG surgery, and the same pattern of angiographic stenosis [concentric and located over the nitinol connector]). On the basis of these observations, we thought that the SACS could have the same behavior as an intracoronary stent and the same mechanism of stenosis. Also, the intravascular ultrasound study performed in 2 of 3 patients corroborated this theory by demonstrating neointimal hyperplasia over the nitinol connector.
Eckstein and colleagues [7] proposed only acetylsalicylic acid (100 mg/d) as a postoperative anti-aggregative therapy. But if there is a risk of neointimal hyperplasia in the proximal anastomosis when the smallest SACS is used, this anti-aggregative treatment can be modified and clopidogrel can be added.
To know there is an intrinsic factor in the nitinol connector that can produce a failure of the vein graft leads us to interrupt the routine use of the SACS and reserve the device for patients who have a severely calcified ascending aorta. We have started a retrospective study with coronary angiograms and clinical status of our 61 patients.
Although we fully acknowledge the potential benefits of a nontouch vein graftaorta anastomosis, further investigations are necessary to evaluate the significance of the SACS in the genesis of proximal graft stenosis and to create a new protocol of anti-aggregative therapy.
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