Title: New approaches to cardiac surgery: Anesthetic implications
1New approaches to cardiac surgeryAnesthetic
implications
- John Butterworth, MD
- Professor Head
- Section on Cardiothoracic Anesthesia
- Wake Forest University School of Medicine
- Winston-Salem, North Carolina
http//www.wfubmc.edu/anesthesia/
Select Education and then click on
Brazil
2Items for Discussion
- Newer techniques for coronary revascularization
- Off-pump coronary artery bypass (OPCAB)
- Total arterial grafting
- Minimally invasive techniques
- Transmyocardial laser revascularization
- Robotic surgery
3History of Coronary Artery Surgery
- 1951 Vineberg and Miller implant IMA in LV
- 1958 Longmire reports coronary endarterectomy
- 1961 Senning performs patch graft of stenotic
coronary with CPB - 1960s Sones Shirey develop coronary
cineangiography - 1964 Kolesov sews IMA to LAD (USSR) off pump
Ake Senning 1915-2000
- 1967 Favaloro and Effler use reversed saphenous
veins to bypass coronary - 1968 IMA reintroduced
- 1971 Sequential grafting
- 1990s Rise of OPCAB
Favaloro. JACC 1999331435-41
4History of Coronary Artery Surgery
- 1951 Vineberg and Miller implant IMA in LV
- 1958 Longmire reports coronary endarterectomy
- 1961 Senning performs patch graft of stenotic
coronary with CPB - 1960s Sones Shirey develop coronary
cineangiography - 1964 Kolesov sews IMA to LAD (USSR) off pump
Frank Sones
- 1967 Favaloro and Effler use reversed saphenous
veins to bypass coronary - 1968 IMA reintroduced
- 1971 Sequential grafting
- 1990s Rise of OPCAB
Favaloro. JACC 1999331435-41
5History of Coronary Artery Surgery
- 1951 Vineberg and Miller implant IMA in LV
- 1958 Longmire reports coronary endarterectomy
- 1961 Senning performs patch graft of stenotic
coronary with CPB - 1960s Sones Shirey develop coronary
cineangiography - 1964 Kolesov sews IMA to LAD (USSR) off pump
René Favaloro
- 1967 Favaloro and Effler use reversed saphenous
veins to bypass coronary - 1968 IMA reintroduced
- 1971 Sequential grafting
- 1990s Rise of OPCAB
Favaloro. JACC 1999331435-41
6Comparative studies of OPCAB vs. CABG CPB in
low risk patients
- Few good studies
- I RCT
- II-1 Well designed, controlled trials not random
- II-2 Cohort or case-control studies
- II-3 Multiple time series
- III Expert opinions, clinical series, clinical
experience
Technology Report. OPCAB. UHC 2002 Omar, Taggart.
Lancet 2002360327-9
7Greater use of blood products in CPB (n100) vs
OPCAB (n100)
Ascione. JTCVS 2001121689-96
8Early and midterm outcome beating heart vs.
cardioplegic arrest
- 401 patients randomly assigned
- Primary outcome all cause mortality
- Reduced AF (-25), chest infection (-12),
inotropes (-18), rbc transfusion (-31),
prolonged hospital (-13) or ICU (-13) LOS - Mortality 2 vs 3
- Cardiac event or death 17 vs 21
Angelini. Lancet 2002 3591194-9
9Association between CPB and worse morbidity and
mortality
- 10,941 consecutive CABGs (7.7 OPCAB)
- Logistic regression to adjust for differences
- No sig difference in periop MI, bleeding, or
reoperation for bleeding - Periop CVA OR0.26 for Off CPB/On CPB
Patel. Eur J Cardio-thorac Surg 200222255-60
10Reduced incidence of stroke with beating heart
CABG
with postoperative stroke
- 16,184 patients undergoing cardiac surgery (CBG
55, OPCAB 11, AV 11, MV 4, 2 or 3 valve 2,
CABG valve 15) - Overall stroke 4.6
- Lower incidence with OPCAB
Bucerius. Ann Thorac Surg 2003 75472-8
11Comparative studies of OPCAB vs. CABG CPB in
high risk patients
- Few good studies
- I RCT
- II-1 Well designed, controlled trials not random
- II-2 Cohort or case-control studies
- II-3 Multiple time series
- III Expert opinions, clinical series, clinical
experience
Technology Report. OPCAB. UHC 2002
12Improved postoperative pulmonary status of OPCAB
vs CABG CPB
- 58 patients with severe COPD in RCT of single
vessel CAB (CPB vs MIDCAB vs OPCAB) - Shortest extubation time with MIDCAB
- Longest ICU LOS with CPB
Time (h) LOS (d)
Güler Ann Thorac Surg 200171152-7
13Reduced mortality and strokes in octogenerians
having OPCAB
- 125 patients age gt80 y CPB 63 OPCAB 62
- LVF similar 54.5 vs 50.9 similar distal
anastamoses 2.9 vs 2.6 - Operative mortality and CVA occur 4.2 times more
often with CPB
Demaria. Circulation 2002106I-5-I-10
14OPCAB Appears Cheaper Than CABG With CPB
Gravlee. ASA Refresher 2002 Ascione. Ann Thorac
Surg 1999682237-42
15Anesthetic implications of OPCAB
- More work than for CABG with CPB
- Hemodynamic instability common during grafting
- Surgical speed and skill define the operation
- Transesophageal echocardiography and SVO2
monitoring often helpful - Rapid emergence from anesthesia (cannot hide
behind fentanyl!) - Coagulopathy much less common
16Anticoagulation OPCAB vs CABG
Target ACT in Seconds During OPCAB
- Most target ACT in 400-480 range during CABG
- Lesser degrees of heparinizatin sought during
OPCAB by n304 surgeons 67 use smaller heparin
dose - Generally no need for antifibrinolytics
DAncona. Heart Surg Forum 20014354-8 Shore-Less
erson Gravlee CPB chapter 22
17Total arterial grafting
- Left internal mammary (thoracic) artery
- Right internal mammary (thoracic) artery
- Gastroepiploic artery
- Left or right radial artery
- Jump grafts
18Anesthetic implications of total arterial grafting
- Longer time delay for harvesting conduit
- Communication with surgeon re placement of
intravenous and arterial cannulae - Uncertain risk of acute vasospasm many drugs
used prophylactically (nitroglycerin, diltiazem,
etc.) - Longer-lasting revascularization for the patient
19Other minimally invasive techniques
- Beating heart
- MIDCAB
- Video assisted direct CAB
- Total endoscopic CAB
- Robotic surgery
- OPCAB with thoracic epidural
- Arrested heart
- Port-access CAB
- Port-access valves
- ASD closure
Ganapathy. Best Pract Res Clin Anaesth
20021663-80
20Minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass
(MIDCAB)
- Approach
- L or R anterior thoracotomy
- Ministernotomy
- Epigastric
- Endoscopic harvest of IMA, radial, or vein
- Video assistance
- Robotic assistance
- Anesthetic concerns
- Increased duration
- Double lumen tube
- Conversion to sternotomy and/or CPB
Ganapathy. Best Pract Res Clin Anaesth
20021663-80
21Minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass
(MIDCAB)
- Approach
- L or R anterior thoracotomy
- Ministernotomy
- Epigastric
- Endoscopic harvest of IMA, radial, or vein
- Video assistance
- Robotic assistance
- Anesthetic concerns
- Increased duration
- Double lumen tube
- Conversion to sternotomy and/or CPB
Ganapathy. Best Pract Res Clin Anaesth
20021663-80
22Potential advantages of thoracic epidural
analgesia for cardiac surgery
- Reduction of neuroendocrine stress response
- Effects on hemodynamics
- Metabolism
- Immune responses/SIRS
- Adverse effects of opioids
- Cardiac sympathectomy
- Improved GI motility
- Intense postoperative analgesia
Chaney. Ch 4 in Regional Anesthesia for Cardiac
Surgery, 2002 Liu, Carpenter, Neal.
Anesthesiology 1995821474-1506
23Potential disadvantages of thoracic epidural
analgesia for cardiac surgery
- Awake patient
- Pneumothorax
- Cardioversion or defibrillation
- Unknown risk of hematoma
- Benefit may be small (no convincing clinical
trials yet published) - Topic covered in another lecture
Chaney. Ch 4 in Regional Anesthesia for Cardiac
Surgery, 2002 Liu, Carpenter, Neal.
Anesthesiology 1995821474-1506
24Other minimally invasive techniques
- Beating heart
- MIDCAB
- Video assisted direct CAB
- Total endoscopic CAB
- Robotic surgery
- OPCAB with thoracic epidural
- Arrested heart
- Port-access CAB
- Port-access valves
- ASD closure
Ganapathy. Best Pract Res Clin Anaesth
20021663-80
25Port-access surgery on the arrested heart
- Suitable for coronary, AVR, MVR, ASD, myxoma
- R lateral thoracotomy or ministernotomy
- CPB via femoral artery and vein (suction assisted
drainage) - Coronary sinus (CS)
- TEE or fluoroscopy
- Endoaortic balloon (EA)
CS
EA
CS
PAC
Ganapathy. Best Pract Res Clin Anaesth
20021663-80
26Items for Discussion
- Newer techniques for coronary revascularization
- Off-pump coronary artery bypass (OPCAB)
- Total arterial grafting
- Minimally invasive techniques
- Transmyocardial laser revascularization
- Robotic surgery
27Rationale for transmyocardial laser
revascularization
- Increasing incidence of coronary disease
- Not always amenable to PTCI or CABG
- Laser creates new channels to bring oxygenated
blood to myocardium - Angiogenesis will follow?
Masson trichrome stain of laser channel after 9
months Domkowski. Circulation 2001103469-71
Saririan. JACC 200341173-83
28Rationale for TMR
- Epicardial approach (surgery)
- Endocardial approach (percutaneous)
- Holmiumyttrium argon garnet (HoYAG) CO2
lasers approved by US Food and Drug Admin
- HoYAG beam transmitted by optical fiber
- CO2 laser beam transmitted by mirrors and lenses
- Different lasers have not been compared in
clinical trials
29Technique of TMR vs PMR
- TMR
- L anterior thoracotomy or median sternotomy
- Cannulation and heparin needed ONLY if concurrent
CABG - 25-50 channels made with 1 cm separation in L
ventricle
- PMR
- 3 catheter based HoYAG devices
- Lack FDA approval
- Introduced into LV via femoral artery
- Laser against endocardium
- Multiple pulses to create up to 20 channels
30Mechanism of actionlaser revascularization
- Open channel hypothesis (similar to sinusoids in
reptile hearts) - Myocardial denervation
- Angiogenesis
- Does not increase blood flow acutely
- Increases blood flow after 2-6 months
Hematoxylin and eosin stain shows new blood
vessels containing erythrocytes after 9
months Domkowski. Circulation 2001103469-71
31Mechanism of actionlaser revascularization
- Open channel hypothesis (similar to sinusoids in
reptile hearts) - Myocardial denervation
- Angiogenesis
- Does not increase blood flow acutely
- Increases blood flow after 2-6 months
Factor VIII antibody stain shows
endothelial-lined new blood vessels after 9
months Domkowski. Circulation 2001103469-71
32Results from clinical trials of TMR
- 6 studies
- 86-275 patients
- HoYAG and CO2
- All show symptom improvement
- No study shows survival benefit
of patients with decrease of 2 CCS angina
classes
1.Allen NEJM 1999 2.Frazier NEJM 1999 3.Schofield
Lancet 1999 4.Burkhoff Lancet 1999 5.Aaberge JACC
2000 6.Jones Ann Thorac Surg 1999
33Cost-utility analysis of TMR
- 188 patients randomized to medical management
TMR - Costs and survival data collected
- Mean year cost for TMR was 11,470 vs 2586 for
medical management alone - Survival 89 (TMR) vs 96 (medical) at 1 year
- Mean quality-adjusted life year difference was
0.039 ( or 228,000 per QALY) - Conclusion an inefficient use of resources for
the United Kingdom
Campbell et al Eur J Cardiothorac Surg
200120312-8
34Anesthetic implications of TMR
- Patients are sick
- Transesophageal echocardiography helpful (puff
of smoke) - Hybrid operations (CABG TMR) more common than
TMR alone - Cardiologists already hard at work perfecting
percutaneous laser equipment!
35Items for Discussion
- Newer techniques for coronary revascularization
- Off-pump coronary artery bypass (OPCAB)
- Total arterial grafting
- Minimally invasive techniques
- Transmyocardial laser revascularization
- Robotic surgery
36Rationale for robot-assisted surgery
- Robot can accomplish surgery via smaller portal
than with conventional minimally invasive
techniques - Further reduction in size of incision
- May ultimately provide opportunity for
telesurgery where operator could be at long
distance from patient
37Challenges of robot-assisted surgery
- Limitations of convention suturing techniques
- Markedly increased time consumption
- Remarkable cost of robots (2-5M)
- Lack of demonstrated outcome benefit
- Challenge for surgeons learning a new technique
38Anesthetic implications of robot-assisted surgery
- Markedly increased time consumption
- Positioning
- Padding
- Common need for one-lung anesthesia
- Double lumen tube
- Bronchial blocker
- Jet ventilation (alternative strategy)
- CO2 insufflation
- Mediastinal shift
- Hypercarbia
DAttelis J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth
200216397-400 Dr. W Nifong. Personal
Communication
39New approaches to cardiac surgeryAnesthetic
implications
- Cardiac surgery evolves rapidly, with or without
data - Emphasis on avoiding CPB may change as CPB
apparatus improves - Safety and utility of OPCAB vs CABG unclear
- Safety and utility of epidural remain
controversial - Robotic and minimally invasive techniques
increasingly popular unclear outcome benefit - Role of TMR unclear
- Intraoperative imaging consistently needed
40OPCAB associates with reduced complications in
high-risk patients
- 286 OPCAB vs 1112 CABG CPB
- OPCAB older sicker (LVEFlt0.3 21 vs 9.6 renal
disease 7 vs 2.3) - 30-day mortality 3.5 vs 7
Al-Ruzzeh Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 20032350-5
41Prospective RCT of thoracic epidural analgesia
for CABG
VAS Pain Score
- 80 randomized to TEA vs iv morphine (MS)
- VAS pain scale
- Better pain scores, less postoperative stress
depression with TEA - Improved PaO2 and peak expiratory flow rate with
TEA
R at rest C cough
Postoperative Day
Royse. Ann Thorac Surg 20037593-100