Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  Bypass surgery safer using heart-lung pump: study
Last updated: 2009-11-05


Bypass surgery safer using heart-lung pump: study
2009-11-05

Category
Surgeries
Nations
U.S.
City
Denver
States
Colorado
Category
Regions
Metropolitan
Denver Metro
Company
Medtronic Inc.
Boston Scientific
University
Duke University
Category
Heart Diseases
Source
(Reuters)

BOSTON (Reuters) - Allowing the heart to keep beating during coronary bypass surgery is riskier than stopping the heart and using a heart-lung machine to keep the patient alive, researchers reported on Wednesday.

Doctors at 18 Veterans Affairs medical centers found that fewer bypass grafts were completed and the one-year risk of heart attack, death, or further heart surgery was increased if surgeons worked on a heart that remained beating.

The technique, involving mechanical heart stabilizers manufactured by companies such as Medtronic Inc and Guidant Corporation, owned by Boston Scientific, is used in about 20 percent of U.S. heart bypass operations.

"I would find myself hard pressed to justify it for someone who is at moderate or somewhat-high risk. I don't think the trade-off is worth it myself," Dr. Frederick Grover of the University of Colorado Denver, who worked on the study, said in a telephone interview.

The researchers, who studied 2,203 patients, said that a year after surgery, heart-related deaths had occurred in 2.7 percent of the off-pump patients, compared with 1.3 percent of those hooked to the heart-lung machine.

And among off-pump patients whose grafts were tested after surgery, 37 percent had at least one blocked graft compared to 29 percent for those who had been hooked to the pump, they reported in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The findings are another blow to advocates of such off-pump surgery, in which a device is used to immobilize part of the beating heart so doctors can stitch new blood vessels around blocked arteries.

When off-pump surgery was pioneered, advocates speculated that avoiding use of a heart-lung machine would produce shorter hospital stays, fewer complications, less bleeding, and fewer after-surgery neurological problems.

"This study actually showed that there weren't any neurological improvements in off-pump versus on-pump surgery. The length of stay was basically the same and there was no difference in how the other organs functioned as well," said Grover.

Off-pump surgery "will probably remain a technique reserved for selected patients and skilled surgeon advocates," Dr. Eric David Peterson of Duke University Medical Center wrote in a commentary.

There will still be advocates for the off-pump procedure, he wrote, because the study looked mostly at men who tended to be younger than typical candidates for bypass surgery.

Off-pump patients may not have fared as well because their surgeon sometimes had a harder time doing as many bypass grafts as planned, the researchers said.

Getting access to some parts of the heart can be more difficult during off-pump surgery, said Grover. "The exposure isn't as good in off-pump. Hooking up to a vessel on the back side of the heart, the underside of the heart, would be the usual reason for a lower number," he said.

"There are some people that really do the off-pump operation very well and very frequently, and it's one of their major areas of expertise. I doubt it will change their practice much," Grover added.

(Editing by Maggie Fox and Mohammad Zargham)

 Education   Medtronic Inc. 
  Profile News4587Gallery13Links  
  The Top 10 Political Scandals of 2009 (2009-12-14)
  Accenture marks 1st sponsor to cut ties with Woods (2009-12-13)
  Chile: Billionaire beat leftists, now faces runoff (2009-12-13)
  Woods' time away from golf will hurt Tiger Inc. (2009-12-12)
  Missing Yale lab tech found near home (2009-12-11)
  Cincinnati's Kelly heading to Notre Dame (2009-12-10)
  Storm dumps snow on Midwest, bitter cold to follow (2009-12-09)
  Scientists, lawyers mull effects of home robots (2009-12-06)
  Obama science advisers grilled over hacked e-mails (2009-12-03)
  Study Reveals the Angriest Americans (2009-12-03)
  U.S. approves first "ethical" human stem cell lines (2009-12-03)
  Clinton daughter Chelsea engaged to be married (2009-11-30)
  Seniors suffer in troubled California subdivision (2009-11-26)
  New climate targets may not change daily life much (2009-11-26)
  Car insurance scofflaws raise health mandate doubt (2009-11-26)
  Students get schooled on hip-hop at Minn. college (2009-11-25)
  AP POLL: Tax the rich to pay for health bill (2009-11-17)
  U.S. lags in paid sick days, work benefits (2009-11-17)
  Study: New device boosts heart failure survival (2009-11-17)
  Goldman Sachs, Buffett to help small businesses (2009-11-17)
  AP Poll: Americans fret over health overhaul costs (2009-11-16)
  With Playboy sale, an icon bows to changing times (2009-11-14)
  Ex-NY Gov. Spitzer speaks at Harvard ethics forum (2009-11-12)
  Few Americans make end-of-life wishes known (2009-11-12)
  Prosecutors claim students paid 2 witnesses (2009-11-10)
Related People
  • Hwang Woo-suk
  • Larry Page
  • Sergey Brin
  • Bill Gates
  • Bill Clinton
  • Paul Allen
  • Dick Cheney
  • George W. Bush
  • John McCain
  • Yu Jie
  • Hu Jintao
  • Edward Kennedy
  • Jon Stewart
  • Samuel Alito
  • Bob Woodruff
  • Related Events
  • Dru Sjodin Kidnapping Case
  • S. Korean Cloning Scandal
  • 2005 Hurricane Katrina
  • 2005 China School Flood
  • U.S. Bush Admin.

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 


    [Copenhagen Climate Meeting]: Gore: Polar ice may vanish in 5-7 years (21:09 12/14)


    [2009 US Health Reform]: Dems weigh dropping Medicare expansion in overhaul (21:09 12/14)


    [111th Congress]: Dems weigh dropping Medicare expansion in overhaul (21:09 12/14)


    [2008 U.S. Financial Rescue]: Obama implores top bankers to increase lending (21:09 12/14)


    [Anti-terror War in Pakistan]: Taliban blow up school in NW Pakistan: official (09:13 12/14)

    [Citigroup Crisis]: Citigroup to repay $20 billion in bailout money (09:13 12/14)

    [North Korea-South Korea]: Seoul to spend $15 million on flu aid to N.Korea (21:09 12/14)

    [Iran Nuclear Crisis]: US pushes for 'additional pressure' on Iran (21:09 12/14)


    [Iran-U.S.]: US pushes for 'additional pressure' on Iran (21:09 12/14)

    [U.S. War on Terror]: US-Pakistanis jailed for video terror plot (21:09 12/14)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.