Coronary artery bypass grafting for ischemic heart disease combined with aortitis |
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Authors: | T Isomura K Hisatomi T Nakao Y Nishi H Inuzuka S Suzuki K Kasuga K Ohishi J Tonaka S Okamatsa |
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Affiliation: | Second Department of Surgery, Kurume University School of Medicine. |
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Abstract: | Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was performed in a 67-year-old woman with aortitis. She had a past history of right radical mastectomy. Preoperative coronary angiogram showed diffuse stenotic lesions in both right and left coronary arteries. The pressure gradient between ascending aorta and peripheral radial artery was 90 mmHg and the cause of coronary stenosis seemed to be hypertension due to stenotic distal aorta. The aortogram showed occluded bilateral internal thoracic arteries (ITA) and stenotic abdominal aorta. The cephalic artery was supplied by a large meandering artery via dilated gastroepiploic artery (GEA). And thus the GEA was not useful for CABG. Quadruple CABG was performed with mild varicose saphenous vein (saphenous vein grafts to left anterior descending artery and third branch, and sequential saphenous vein graft to right posterior descending and atrioventricular branches). It seemed to be important to demonstrate the arterial lesion of ITA and GEA before CABG in patients with aortitis. |
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