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Beginning and development of surgery for acquired valvular heart disease in Japan
Authors:Kazuhiro Hashimoto
Institution:(1) Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute, Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA;
Abstract:The initiation and development of surgery for acquired valvular heart disease in Japan was reviewed. The first series of attempts at closed valvular surgery were performed in 1951–1952 by collaboration between the brothers Tohru and Shigeru Sakakibara in patients with pulmonary or mitral stenosis. During the popularization of closed valvular surgery, open heart surgery under direct vision was successfully performed by Shigeru Sakakibara with cooling of the body in 1954 and by using cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) in 1956. With the development of CPB and artificial heart valves, closed valvular heart surgery was replaced by open surgery, which expanded rapidly during the 1960s and 1970s. Along with the serial introduction and improvement of mechanical vales thereafter, bioprosthetic valves were also introduced and were adopted for certain patients. Use of bioprosthetic valves in the aortic position exceeded 50% in 2005, along with the increase of elderly patients. Although trials of mitral valve plasty for mitral regurgitation were first done during the 1950s to1960s in Japan, interest in valve plasty only increased during the late 1970s. Considering the patient’s quality of life and the long-term results, mitral valve plasty became the major procedure (exceeding valve replacement) from 2004. In 2002, the Guideline for Surgical and Interventional Treatment of Valvular Heart Disease was published by a joint committee of the relevant academic societies, and it has made an important contribution to improving surgical outcomes.
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