Heart Valve Surgery
in a Very High-Risk Population: A Preliminary Experience in Awake Patients
Tomaso Bottio, Gianluigi Bisleri, Paolo Piccoli, Alberto Negri, Aldo
Manzato1, Claudio Muneretto
Departments of Cardiovascular Surgery and
1Intensive Care Unit, University of Brescia Medical School, Brescia,
Italy |
Background and aim of the study: Heart valve surgery in
high-risk patients is associated with considerable morbidity and mortality.
Epidural anesthesia without mechanical ventilation has been proposed
to reduce invasiveness. An analysis was conducted in very high-risk heart
valve patients of mid-term survival free from complications, and patient
satisfaction of regional anesthesia use, without mechanical ventilation.
Methods: A prospective follow up study was conducted in 50 patients (24
females, 26 males; mean age 74 ± 10 years; range: 43-89 years) who
underwent heart valve surgery with epidural anesthesia without endotracheal
intubation. Preoperatively, all patients were in NYHA class III or IV;
eight patients (16%) had undergone a previous cardiac procedure. The median
Additive and Logistic EuroSCORE were 14.5 and 52%, respectively. Twenty-seven
patients underwent aortic valve replacement, 10 mitral valve replacement,
10 mitral valve repair, two double valve replacement, and one patient ascending
aorta replacement. Associated surgical procedures included coronary artery
bypass grafting in 12 patients (24%), ascending aorta replacement in three
(6%), and left ventricle reshaping in two (4%). Radiofrequency ablation
to treat chronic atrial fibrillation (AF) was performed in 15 patients
(30%). All patients were prospectively followed up, and
| a six-month quality of life assessment was performed
in all survivors.
Results: Procedures were performed without mechanical ventilation in
completely awake and conscious patients. There were two in-hospital and
two long-term deaths (8%). Three patients had had previous cardiac surgery
(two double valve replacements, two complex mitral valve surgery). Among
survivors, 34 (71%) had an uneventful postoperative outcome, except for
AF in nine cases. Eight patients required revision for bleeding; two
of these were redo cases. The most consistent postoperative complication
was acute renal failure in 16 patients, five of whom had previous chronic
renal failure. Three patients required mechanical ventilatory support,
and none had a cerebrovascular accident. Patients were discharged home
after a mean of 10 ± 5 days (including ICU stay; median 9 h).
At follow up, all patients were in NYHA class I/II, and all survivors
expressed their satisfaction with epidural anesthesia.
Conclusion: Heart valve surgery while on cardiopulmonary bypass is feasible
and safe using epidural anesthesia. By maintaining autonomic ventilation,
a low mid-term morbidity and mortality was observed in patients in whom
there was an unacceptable operative risk.
The Journal of Heart Valve Disease 2007;16:187-194 |