The Influence
of Coronary Artery Disease on Quality of Life after Mechanical Valve
Replacement |
|||||||
Background and aim of the study: Coronary artery
disease (CAD) is known to impact negatively on long-term survival following
valve replacement (VR). However, its influence on quality of life (QOL)
remains undefined in patients with mechanical VR. |
years for VR+CABG patients. Actuarial survival was significantly
better in VR patients than VR+CABG patients (79.4 ±
2.4% versus 75.0 ± 2.7% at five years; 58.6 ± 4.3% versus
47.5 ± 4.5% at 10 years; p = 0.018). The equality of survival distribution
was significantly different (p = 0.008). Multivariate analysis identified
CABG as a predictor of late mortality (p = 0.003) but not of late QOL.
QOL was similar on the eight health scales and physical health (44.5 ±
10.3 versus 45.5 ± 10.7) and mental health (52.4 ± 9.8 versus
52.5 ± 10.1) summary components, respectively. Age (p = 0.004),
time from surgery to SF-36 administration (p = 0.007) and gender (p = 0.029),
but not CABG, were significantly associated with QOL as assessed by the
SF-36. Conclusion: CAD is a predictor of late mortality after mechanical VR. However, provided CABG is performed concomitantly with VR, the patient’s long-term QOL appears to return to that expected for the general population. |
||||||
|
|||||||