113 results on '"Salsano, Antonio"'
Search Results
2. Aortic arch registry of type a aortic dissection (AoArch) - rationale, design and definition criteria
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Nappi, Francesco, Schoell, Thibaut, Singh, Sanjeet Singh Avtaar, Salsano, Antonio, Abdou, Ibrahim, Gambardella, Ivancarmine, Francesco Santini, F., Fiore, Antonio, Garufi, Luigi, Demondion, Pierre, Leprince, Pascal, Nicolas Bonnet, N., and Spadaccio, Cristiano
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- 2024
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3. Endovascular thrombectomy versus intravenous thrombolysis for primary distal, medium vessel occlusion in acute ischemic stroke
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Salsano Giancarlo, Salsano Antonio, Del Sette Bruno, D’Alonzo Alessio, Sassos Davide, Alexandre Andrea, Pedicelli Alessandro, Di Iorio Riccardo, Colò Francesca, and Castellan Lucio
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dmvo ,endovascular therapy ,ivt ,acute ischemic stroke ,Medicine - Abstract
In the absence of clinical trials, the benefit of endovascular therapy (EVT) on the treatment of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) with primary distal and medium vessel occlusions (DMVO) is still not well defined. The aim of the study is to evaluate EVT with or without intravenous thrombolysis (EVT ± IVT) in primary DMVO stroke in comparison with a control cohort treated with IVT alone.
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- 2024
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4. Impact of Surgeon Experience and Centre Volume on Outcome After Off-Pump Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery: Results From the European Multicenter Study on Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting (E-CABG) Registry
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Naito, Shiho, Demal, Till J., Sill, Björn, Reichenspurner, Hermann, Onorati, Francesco, Gatti, Giuseppe, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Faggian, Giuseppe, Salsano, Antonio, Santini, Francesco, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Zanobini, Marco, Musumeci, Francesco, Rubino, Antonino S., Bancone, Ciro, De Feo, Marisa, Nicolini, Francesco, Dalén, Magnus, Speziale, Giuseppe, Bounader, Karl, Mäkikallio, Timo, Tauriainen, Tuomas, Ruggieri, Vito G., Perrotti, Andrea, and Biancari, Fausto
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- 2023
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5. Treatment and outcomes of mechanical complications of acute myocardial infarction during the Covid-19 era: A comparison with the pre-Covid-19 period. A systematic review and meta-analysis
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Spadaccio Cristiano, Pisani Angelo, Salsano Antonio, Nenna Antonio, Fardman Alexander, D’Alessandro David, Santini Francesco, Gaudino Mario F. L., Sundt Thoralf M., and Rose David
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myocardial infarction ,mechanical complications ,covid-19 ,Medicine - Abstract
This study aims to compare treatments and outcomes of mechanical complications of acute myocardial infarction (MI) during the Covid-19 and in the pre-Covid-19 era. Electronic databases have been searched for MI mechanical complications during the Covid-19 era and in the previous period from January 1998 to January 2020 (pre-Covid-19 era), until October 2021. To perform a quantitative analysis of non-comparative series, a meta-analysis of proportion has been conducted. Early mortality after surgical treatment was 15.0% while it was significantly higher after conservative treatment (62.4%) (P = 0.026). Early mortality after surgical treatment was seemingly higher in the pre-Covid-19 era but the difference did not reach statistical significance (15.0% vs 38.9%; P = 0.13). Mortality in patients treated conservatively, or turned down for surgery, was lower during the Covid-19 pandemic (62.4% vs 97.7%; P = 0.001). The crude mean prevalence of the use rate of conservative or surgical treatment across the studies during Covid-19 and in the pre-Covid-19 era was comparable. The current increased incidence of MI mechanical complications might be a consequence of delayed presentation or restricted access to hospital facilities. Despite the general negative impact of Covid-19 on cardiac surgery volumes and outcomes and the apparent increase of the incidence of MI complications, the outcomes of their surgical and clinical treatment seem not to have been affected during the pandemic.
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- 2022
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6. Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting in Patients With High Risk of Bleeding
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Demal, Till J., Fehr, Samira, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Reiter, Beate, Bibiza, Eric, Reichenspurner, Hermann, Gatti, Giuseppe, Onorati, Francesco, Faggian, Giuseppe, Salsano, Antonio, Santini, Francesco, Perrotti, Andrea, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Zanobini, Marco, Saccocci, Matteo, Musumeci, Francesco, Rubino, Antonino S., De Feo, Marisa, Bancone, Ciro, Nicolini, Francesco, Dalén, Magnus, Maselli, Daniele, Bounader, Karl, Mäkikallio, Timo, Juvonen, Tatu, Ruggieri, Vito G., and Biancari, Fausto
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- 2022
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7. Endovascular Versus Open Surgical Repair for Ruptured Descending Aortic Pathologies: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Observational Studies
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Salsano, Antonio, Salsano, Giancarlo, Spinella, Giovanni, Zaottini, Federico, Mavilio, Nicola, Perocchio, Giacomo, Pane, Bianca, Ricci, Davide, Pratesi, Giovanni, Castellan, Lucio, and Santini, Francesco
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- 2021
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8. Surgical myocardial revascularization outcomes in Kawasaki disease: systematic review and meta-analysis
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Salsano Antonio, Liao Jingda, Miette Ambra, Capoccia Massimo, Mariscalco Giovanni, Santini Francesco, and Corno Antonio F.
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aorto-coronary bypass grafting ,coronary artery aneurisms ,kawasaki disease ,surgical revascularization ,Medicine - Abstract
Kawasaki disease (KD) is a systemic inflammatory condition occurring predominantly in children. Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is performed in the presence of inflammation and aneurysms of the coronary arteries. The objectives of our study were to assess which CABG strategy provides better graft patency and early and long-term outcomes.
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- 2021
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9. Intestinal Microbiota and Derived Metabolites in Myocardial Fibrosis and Postoperative Atrial Fibrillation.
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Nenna, Antonio, Laudisio, Alice, Taffon, Chiara, Fogolari, Marta, Spadaccio, Cristiano, Ferrisi, Chiara, Loreni, Francesco, Giacinto, Omar, Mastroianni, Ciro, Barbato, Raffaele, Rose, David, Salsano, Antonio, Santini, Francesco, Angeletti, Silvia, Crescenzi, Anna, Antonelli Incalzi, Raffaele, Chello, Massimo, and Lusini, Mario
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MICROBIAL metabolites ,TRANSFORMING growth factors-beta ,RIGHT heart atrium ,ATRIAL fibrillation ,FIBROSIS ,GUT microbiome ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,GENE expression - Abstract
The high incidence of atrial fibrillation (AFib) following cardiac surgery (postoperative atrial fibrillation, POAF) relies on specific surgical features. However, in the setting of POAF, the role of the microbiome in the modulation of cardiac fibrosis is still not clear. This study aimed to analyze the effect of the microbiome and its main metabolic product (trimethylamine-N-oxide, TMAO) in the fibrosis of myocardial tissue, to investigate its role in POAF. Patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass, central atrio-caval cannulation and no history of AFib, were included. A fragment of the right atrium was analyzed for qualitative and mRNA-quantitative evaluation. A preoperative blood sample was analyzed with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). A total of 100 patients have been included, with POAF occurring in 38%. Histologically, a higher degree of fibrosis, angiogenesis and inflammation has been observed in POAF. Quantitative evaluation showed increased mRNA expression of collagen-1, collagen-3, fibronectin, and transforming growth factor beta (TGFb) in the POAF group. ELISA analysis showed higher levels of TMAO, lipopolysaccharide and TGFb in POAF, with similar levels of sP-selectin and zonulin. TMAO ≥ 61.8 ng/mL (odds ratio, OR 2.88 [1.35–6.16], p = 0.006), preoperative hemoglobin < 13.1 g/dL (OR 2.37 [1.07–5.24], p = 0.033) and impaired right ventricular function (OR 2.38 [1.17–4.83], p = 0.017) were independent predictors of POAF. Also, TMAO was significantly associated with POAF by means of increased fibrosis. Gut microbiome product TMAO is crucial for myocardial fibrosis, which is a key factor for POAF. Patients in preoperative sinus rhythm who will develop POAF have increased genetic expression of pro-fibrotic genes and enhanced fibrosis in histological staining. Elevated TMAO level (≥61.8 ng/mL) is an independent risk factor for POAF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. A Nomogram for Predicting Long Length of Stay in The Intensive Care Unit in Patients Undergoing CABG: Results From the Multicenter E-CABG Registry
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Dominici, Carmelo, Salsano, Antonio, Nenna, Antonio, Spadaccio, Cristiano, Barbato, Raffaele, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Santini, Francesco, Biancari, Fausto, and Chello, Massimo
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- 2020
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11. Aortic Valve Replacement for Aortic Stenosis in Low-, Intermediate-, and High-Risk Patients: Preliminary Results From a Prospective Multicenter Registry
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Onorati, Francesco, Quintana, Eduard, El-Dean, Zein, Perrotti, Andrea, Sponga, Sandro, Ruggieri, Vito Giovanni, Rinaldi, Mauro, Milano, Aldo Domenico, Santini, Francesco, Chocron, Sidney, Livi, Ugolino, Salizzoni, Stefano, Loizzo, Tommaso, Salsano, Antonio, Di Cesare, Alessandro, Faggian, Giuseppe, Castella, Manuel, and Nicolini, Francesco
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- 2020
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12. Similar outcome of tricuspid valve repair and replacement for isolated tricuspid infective endocarditis
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Di Mauro, Michele, Bonalumi, Giorgia, Giambuzzi, Ilaria, Dato, Guglielmo Mario Actis, Centofanti, Paolo, Corte, Alessandro Della, Ratta, Ester Della, Cugola, Diego, Merlo, Maurizio, Santini, Francesco, Salsano, Antonio, Rinaldi, Mauro, Mancuso, Samuel, Cappabianca, Giangiuseppe, Beghi, Cesare, De Vincentiis, Carlo, Biondi, Andrea, Livi, Ugolino, Sponga, Sandro, Pacini, Davide, Murana, Giacomo, Scrofani, Roberto, Antona, Carlo, Cagnoni, Giovanni, Nicolini, Francesco, Benassi, Filippo, De Bonis, Michele, Pozzoli, Alberto, Pano, Marco, Nicolardi, Salvatore, Falcetta, Giosuè, Colli, Andrea, Musumeci, Francesco, Gherli, Riccardo, Vizzardi, Enrico, Salvador, Loris, Picichè, Marco, Paparella, Domenico, Margari, Vito, Troise, Giovanni, Villa, Emmanuel, Dossena, Yudit, Lucarelli, Carla, Onorati, Francesco, Faggian, Giuseppe, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Maselli, Daniele, Barili, Fabio, Parolari, Alessandro, and Lorusso, Roberto
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- 2022
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13. Culture-negative infective endocarditis (CNIE): impact on postoperative mortality
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Salsano Antonio, Giacobbe Daniele Roberto, Del Puente Filippo, Natali Roberto, Miette Ambra, Moscatelli Sara, Perocchio Giacomo, Scarano Flavio, Porto Italo, Mariscalco Giovanni, Bassetti Matteo, and Santini Francesco
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cardiopulmonary bypass ,endocarditis ,heart valves ,inflammation ,Medicine - Abstract
Poor postoperative outcomes have been reported after surgery for infective endocarditis (IE). Whether the absence of positive cultures impacts the prognosis remains a matter of discussion. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of negative cultures on the prognosis of surgically treated IE.
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- 2020
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14. Perioperative Bleeding in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome Treated With Fondaparinux Versus Low-Molecular-Weight Heparin Before Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting
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Khodabandeh, Sorosh, Biancari, Fausto, Kinnunen, Eeva-Maija, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Airaksinen, Juhani, Gherli, Riccardo, Gatti, Giuseppe, Demal, Till, Onorati, Francesco, Faggian, Giuseppe, De Feo, Marisa, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Rubino, Antonino S., Maselli, Daniele, Salsano, Antonio, Nicolini, Francesco, Zanobini, Marco, Ruggieri, Vito G., Bounader, Karl, Perrotti, Andrea, and Dalén, Magnus
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- 2019
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15. Prognostic Impact of Prolonged Cross-Clamp Time in Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting
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Ruggieri, Vito G., Bounader, Karl, Verhoye, Jean Philippe, Onorati, Francesco, Rubino, Antonino S., Gatti, Giuseppe, Tauriainen, Tuomas, De Feo, Marisa, Reichart, Daniel, Dalén, Magnus, Svenarud, Peter, Faggian, Giuseppe, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Maselli, Daniele, Gherli, Riccardo, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Salsano, Antonio, Nicolini, Francesco, Gherli, Tiziano, Saccocci, Matteo, Airaksinen, Juhani K.E., Chocron, Sidney, Perrotti, Andrea, and Biancari, Fausto
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- 2018
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16. Enhanced recovery protocols after surgery: A systematic review and meta‐analysis of randomized trials in cardiac surgery.
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Spadaccio, Cristiano, Salsano, Antonio, Pisani, Angelo, Nenna, Antonio, Nappi, Francesco, Osho, Asishana, D'Alessandro, David, Sundt, Thoralf M., Crestanello, Juan, Engelman, Daniel, and Rose, David
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ENHANCED recovery after surgery protocol , *CARDIAC surgery , *REVASCULARIZATION (Surgery) , *PERIOPERATIVE care , *SURGICAL complications - Abstract
Background: Previous meta‐analyses combining randomized and observational evidence in cardiac surgery have shown positive impact of enhanced recovery protocols after surgery (ERAS) on postoperative outcomes. However, definitive data based on randomized studies are missing, and the entirety of the ERAS measures and pathway, as recently systematized in guidelines and consensus statements, have not been captured in the published studies. The available literature actually focuses on "ERAS‐like" protocols or only limited number of ERAS measures. This study aims at analyzing all randomized studies applying ERAS‐like protocols in cardiac surgery for perioperative outcomes. Methods: A meta‐analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing ERAS‐like with standard protocols of perioperative care was performed (PROSPERO registration CRD42021283765). PRISMA guidelines were used for abstracting and assessing data. Results: Thirteen single center RCTs (N = 1704, 850 in ERAS‐like protocol and 854 in the standard care group) were selected. The most common procedures were surgical revascularization (66.3%) and valvular surgery (24.9%). No difference was found in the incidence of inhospital mortality between the ERAS and standard treatment group (risk ratio [RR] 0.61 [0.31; 1.20], p = 0.15). ERAS was associated with reduced intensive care unit (standardized mean difference [SMD] −0.57, p < 0.01) and hospital stay (SMD −0.23, p < 0.01) and reduced rates of overall complications when compared to the standard protocol (RR 0.60, p < 0.01) driven by the reduction in stroke (RR 0.29 [0.13; 0.62], p < 0.01). A significant heterogeneity in terms of the elements of the ERAS protocol included in the studies was observed. Conclusions: ERAS‐like protocols have no impact on short‐term survival after cardiac surgery but allows for a faster hospital discharge while potentially reducing surgical complications. However, this study highlights a significant nonadherence and heterogeneity to the entirety of ERAS protocols warranting further RCTs in this field including a greater number of elements of the framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Prognostic Impact of Asymptomatic Carotid Artery Stenosis in Patients Undergoing Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting
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Santarpino, Giuseppe, Nicolini, Francesco, De Feo, Marisa, Dalén, Magnus, Fischlein, Theodor, Perrotti, Andrea, Reichart, Daniel, Gatti, Giuseppe, Onorati, Francesco, Franzese, Ilaria, Faggian, Giuseppe, Bancone, Ciro, Chocron, Sidney, Khodabandeh, Sorosh, Rubino, Antonino S., Maselli, Daniele, Nardella, Saverio, Gherli, Riccardo, Salsano, Antonio, Zanobini, Marco, Saccocci, Matteo, Bounader, Karl, Rosato, Stefano, Tauriainen, Tuomas, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Airaksinen, Juhani, Ruggieri, Vito G., and Biancari, Fausto
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- 2018
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18. Utility of glycated hemoglobin screening in patients undergoing elective coronary artery surgery: Prospective, cohort study from the E-CABG registry
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Nicolini, Francesco, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Gatti, Giuseppe, Reichart, Daniel, Onorati, Francesco, Faggian, Giuseppe, Dalén, Magnus, Khodabandeh, Sorosh, Fischlein, Theodor, Maselli, Daniele, Nardella, Saverio, Rubino, Antonino S., De Feo, Marisa, Salsano, Antonio, Gherli, Riccardo, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Kinnunen, Eeva-Maija, Ruggieri, Vito G., Bounader, Karl, Saccocci, Matteo, Chocron, Sidney, Airaksinen, Juhani, Perrotti, Andrea, and Biancari, Fausto
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- 2018
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19. A predictive model for early mortality after surgical treatment of heart valve or prosthesis infective endocarditis. The EndoSCORE
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Di Mauro, Michele, Dato, Guglielmo Mario Actis, Barili, Fabio, Gelsomino, Sandro, Santè, Pasquale, Corte, Alessandro Della, Carrozza, Antonio, Ratta, Ester Della, Cugola, Diego, Galletti, Lorenzo, Devotini, Roger, Casabona, Riccardo, Santini, Francesco, Salsano, Antonio, Scrofani, Roberto, Antona, Carlo, Botta, Luca, Russo, Claudio, Mancuso, Samuel, Rinaldi, Mauro, De Vincentiis, Carlo, Biondi, Andrea, Beghi, Cesare, Cappabianca, Giangiuseppe, Tarzia, Vincenzo, Gerosa, Gino, De Bonis, Michele, Pozzoli, Alberto, Nicolini, Francesco, Benassi, Filippo, Rosato, Francesco, Grasso, Elena, Livi, Ugolino, Sponga, Sandro, Pacini, Davide, Di Bartolomeo, Roberto, De Martino, Andrea, Bortolotti, Uberto, Onorati, Francesco, Faggian, Giuseppe, Lorusso, Roberto, Vizzardi, Enrico, Di Giammarco, Gabriele, Marinelli, Daniele, Villa, Emmanuel, Troise, Giovanni, Picichè, Marco, Musumeci, Francesco, Paparella, Domenico, Margari, Vito, Tritto, Francesco, Damiani, Girolamo, Scrascia, Giuseppe, Zaccaria, Salvatore, Renzulli, Attilio, Serraino, Giuseppe, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Maselli, Daniele, Foschi, Massimiliano, Parolari, Alessandro, and Nappi, Giannantonio
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- 2017
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20. The impact of minor blood transfusion on the outcome after coronary artery bypass grafting
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Kinnunen, Eeva-Maija, Zanobini, Marco, Onorati, Francesco, Brascia, Debora, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Franzese, Ilaria, Ruggieri, Vito G., Bounader, Karl, Perrotti, Andrea, Musumeci, Francesco, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Maselli, Daniele, Nardella, Saverio, Gulbins, Helmut, Gherli, Riccardo, Rubino, Antonino S., Mignosa, Carmelo, De Feo, Marisa, Gatti, Giuseppe, Santini, Francesco, Salsano, Antonio, Dalén, Magnus, Saccocci, Matteo, Reichart, Daniel, Faggian, Giuseppe, Gherli, Tiziano, Nicolini, Francesco, and Biancari, Fausto
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- 2017
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21. Survival and Recurrence of Endocarditis following Mechanical vs. Biological Aortic Valve Replacement for Endocarditis in Patients Aged 40 to 65 Years: Data from the INFECT-Registry.
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Salsano, Antonio, Di Mauro, Michele, Labate, Laura, Della Corte, Alessandro, Lo Presti, Federica, De Bonis, Michele, Trumello, Cinzia, Rinaldi, Mauro, Cura Stura, Erik, Actis Dato, Guglielmo, Punta, Giuseppe, Nicolini, Francesco, Carino, Davide, De Vincentiis, Carlo, Garatti, Andrea, Cappabianca, Giangiuseppe, Musazzi, Andrea, Cugola, Diego, Merlo, Maurizio, and Pacini, Davide
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AORTIC valve transplantation , *ENDOCARDITIS , *PROSTHETIC heart valves , *INFECTIVE endocarditis , *AORTIC valve , *OVERALL survival - Abstract
Background: Infective endocarditis (IE) is a serious disease, and in many cases, surgery is necessary. Whether the type of prosthesis implanted for aortic valve replacement (AVR) for IE impacts patient survival is a matter of debate. The aim of the present study is to quantify differences in long-term survival and recurrence of endocarditis AVR for IE according to prosthesis type among patients aged 40 to 65 years. Methods: This was an analysis of the INFECT-REGISTRY. Trends in proportion to the use of mechanical prostheses versus biological ones over time were tested by applying the sieve bootstrapped t-test. Confounders were adjusted using the optimal full-matching propensity score. The difference in overall survival was compared using the Cox model, whereas the differences in recurrence of endocarditis were evaluated using the Gray test. Results: Overall, 4365 patients were diagnosed and operated on for IE from 2000 to 2021. Of these, 549, aged between 40 and 65 years, underwent AVR. A total of 268 (48.8%) received mechanical prostheses, and 281 (51.2%) received biological ones. A significant trend in the reduction of implantation of mechanical vs. biological prostheses was observed during the study period (p < 0.0001). Long-term survival was significantly higher among patients receiving a mechanical prosthesis than those receiving a biological prosthesis (hazard ratio [HR] 0.546, 95% CI: 0.322–0.926, p = 0.025). Mechanical prostheses were associated with significantly less recurrent endocarditis after AVR than biological prostheses (HR 0.268, 95%CI: 0.077–0.933, p = 0.039). Conclusions: The present analysis of the INFECT-REGISTRY shows increased survival and reduced recurrence of endocarditis after a mechanical aortic valve prosthesis implant for IE in middle-aged patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Higher preoperative left atrial volume index predicts lack of mitral regurgitation improvement after transcatheter aortic valve replacement
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Dominici, Carmelo, Salsano, Antonio, Nenna, Antonio, Spadaccio, Cristiano, Barbato, Raffaele, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Santini, Francesco, Bashir, Mohamad, El-Dean, Zein, and Chello, Massimo
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- 2020
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23. Lactate-Based Difference as a Determinant of Outcomes following Surgery for Type A Acute Aortic Dissection: A Multi-Centre Study.
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Nappi, Francesco, Alzamil, Almothana, Salsano, Antonio, Avtaar Singh, Sanjeet Singh, Gambardella, Ivancarmine, Santini, Francesco, Fiore, Antonio, Perocchio, Giacomo, Demondion, Pierre, Mesnildrey, Patrick, Schoell, Thibaut, Bonnet, Nicolas, and Leprince, Pascal
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AORTIC dissection ,ANAEROBIC threshold ,SURVIVAL rate ,MEDICAL protocols ,DEATH rate - Abstract
Type A acute aortic dissection (TAAAD) is a serious condition within the acute aortic syndromes that demands immediate treatment. Despite advancements in diagnostic and referral pathways, the survival rate post-surgery currently sits at almost 20%. Our objective was to pinpoint clinical indicators for mortality and morbidity, particularly raised arterial lactate as a key factor for negative outcomes. Methods: All patients referred to the three cardiovascular centres between January 2005 and December 2022 were included in the study. The inclusion criteria required the presence of a lesion involving the ascending aorta, symptoms within 7 days of surgery, and referral for primary surgical repair of TAAAD based on recommendations, with consideration for other concomitant major cardiac surgical procedures needed during TAAAD and retrograde extension of TAAAD. We conducted an analysis of both continuous and categorical variables and utilised predictive mean matching to fill in missing numeric features. For missing binary variables, we used logistic regression to impute values. We specifically targeted early postoperative mortality and employed LASSO regression to minimise potential collinearity of over-fitting variables and variables measured from the same patient. Results: A total of 633 patients were recruited for the study, out of which 449 patients had complete preoperative arterial lactate data. The average age of the patients was 64 years, and 304 patients were male (67.6%). The crude early postoperative mortality rate was 24.5% (110 out of 449 patients). The mortality rate did not show any significant difference when comparing conservative and extensive surgeries. However, malperfusion had a significant impact on mortality [48/131 (36.6%) vs. 62/318 (19.5%), p < 0.001]. Preoperative arterial lactates were significantly elevated in patients with malperfusion. The optimal prognostic threshold of arterial lactate for predicting early postoperative mortality in our cohort was ≥2.6 mmol/L. Conclusion: The arterial lactate concentration in patients referred for TAAAD is an independent factor for both operative mortality and postoperative complications. In addition to mortality, patients with an upper arterial lactate cut-off of ≥2.6 mmol/L face significant risks of VA ECMO and the need for dialysis within the first 48 h after surgery. To improve recognition and facilitate rapid transfer and surgical treatment protocol, more diligent efforts are required in the management of malperfusion in TAAAD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. Revascularization of Occluded Right Coronary Artery and Outcome After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting.
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Biancari, Fausto, Dalén, Magnus, Tauriainen, Tuomas, Gatti, Giuseppe, Salsano, Antonio, Santini, Francesco, Feo, Marisa De, Zhang, Qiyao, Mazzaro, Enzo, Franzese, Ilaria, Bancone, Ciro, Zanobini, Marco, Mäkikallio, Timo, Saccocci, Matteo, Francica, Alessandra, Onorati, Francesco, El-Dean, Zein, and Mariscalco, Giovanni
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CORONARY artery bypass ,CORONARY arteries ,PROPENSITY score matching ,CORONARY artery disease ,MYOCARDIAL infarction - Abstract
Objectives The aim of the present study was to evaluate the results of isolated coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) with or without revascularization of the occluded right coronary artery (RCA). Methods Patients undergoing isolated CABG were included in a prospective European multicenter registry. Outcomes were adjusted for imbalance in preoperative variables with propensity score matching analysis. Late outcomes were evaluated with Kaplan–Meier's method and competing risk analysis. Results Out of 2,948 included in this registry, 724 patients had a total occlusion of the RCA and were the subjects of this analysis. Occluded RCA was not revascularized in 251 (34.7%) patients with significant variability between centers. Among 245 propensity score-matched pairs, patients with and without revascularization of occluded RCA had similar early outcomes. The nonrevascularized RCA group had increased rates of 5-year all-cause mortality (17.7 vs. 11.7%, p = 0.039) compared with patients who had their RCA revascularized. The rates of myocardial infarction and repeat revascularization were only numerically increased but contributed to a significantly higher rate of MACCE (24.7 vs. 15.7%, p = 0.020) at 5 year among patients with nonrevascularized RCA. Conclusion In this multicenter study, one-third of totally occluded RCAs was not revascularized during isolated CABG for multivessel coronary artery disease. Failure to revascularize an occluded RCA in these patients increased the risk of all-cause mortality and MACCEs at 5 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. What is the Best Revascularization Strategy for Acute Occlusive Arterial Mesenteric Ischemia: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
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Salsano, Giancarlo, Salsano, Antonio, Sportelli, Elena, Petrocelli, Francesco, Dahmane, M’ahmed, Spinella, Giovanni, Pane, Bianca, Mambrini, Simone, Palombo, Domenico, and Santini, Francesco
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- 2017
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26. Prior Percutaneous Coronary Intervention and Mortality in Patients Undergoing Surgical Myocardial Revascularization: Results From the E-CABG (European Multicenter Study on Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting) With a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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Mariscalco, Giovanni, Rosato, Stefano, Serraino, Giuseppe F., Maselli, Daniele, Dalén, Magnus, Airaksinen, Juhani K.E., Reichart, Daniel, Zanobini, Marco, Onorati, Francesco, De Feo, Marisa, Gherli, Riccardo, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Rubino, Antonino S., Gatti, Giuseppe, Nicolini, Francesco, Santini, Francesco, Perrotti, Andrea, Bruno, Vito D., Ruggieri, Vito G., Biancari, Fausto, Ahmed, Aamer, Masala, Nicola, Dominici, Carmelo, Nardella, Saverio, Khodabandeh, Sorosh, Svenarud, Peter, Gulbins, Helmut, Saccocci, Matteo, Faggian, Giuseppe, Franzese, Ilaria, Bancone, Ciro, Della Ratta, Ester E., Musumeci, Francesco, Gazdag, Laszlo, Fischlein, Theodor, Mignosa, Carmelo, Pappalardo, Aniello, Gherli, Tiziano, Salsano, Antonio, Olivieri, Guido, Bounader, Karl, Verhoye, Jean P., Chocron, Sidney, Tauriainen, Tuomas, and Kinnunen, Eeva-Maija
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- 2018
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27. Surgical Strategy for the Repair of Acute Type A Aortic Dissection: A Multicenter Study.
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Nappi, Francesco, Avtaar Singh, Sanjeet Singh, Gambardella, Ivancarmine, Alzamil, Almothana, Salsano, Antonio, Santini, Francesco, Biancari, Fausto, Schoell, Thibaut, Bonnet, Nicolas, Folliguet, Thierry, and Fiore, Antonio
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- 2023
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28. Prosthetic valve endocarditis: predictors of early outcome of surgical therapy. A multicentric study
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Luciani, Nicola, Mossuto, Eugenio, Ricci, Davide, Luciani, Marco, Russo, Marco, Salsano, Antonio, Pozzoli, Alberto, Pierri, Michele D., D’Onofrio, Augusto, Chiariello, Giovanni A., Glieca, Franco, Canziani, Alberto, Rinaldi, Mauro, Nardi, Paolo, Milazzo, Valentina, Trecarichi, Enrico M., Santini, Francesco, De Bonis, Michele, Torracca, Lucia, Bizzotto, Eleonora, and Tumbarello, Mario
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- 2017
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29. Postoperative Quality of Life After Full-sternotomy and Ministernotomy Aortic Valve Replacement.
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Perrotti, Andrea, Francica, Alessandra, Monaco, Francesco, Quintana, Edward, Sponga, Sandro, El-Dean, Zein, Salizzoni, Stefano, Loizzo, Tommaso, Salsano, Antonio, Di Cesare, Alessandro, Benassi, Filippo, Castella, Manuel, Rinaldi, Mauro, Chocron, Sidney, Vendramin, Igor, Faggian, Giuseppe, Santini, Francesco, Nicolini, Francesco, Milano, Aldo Domenico, and Ruggieri, Vito Giovanni
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Few longitudinal data exist comparing quality of life (QoL) after full sternotomy (fs) aortic valve replacement (AVR) (fsAVR) with ministernotomy AVR (msAVR). A total of 1844 consecutive patients undergoing AVR who were prospectively enrolled in a European multicenter registry were dichotomized according to surgical access. Nonparsimonious propensity score matching selected 187 pairs of patients who underwent fsAVR or msAVR with comparable baseline characteristics. Hospital outcome was compared in the 2 groups. QoL was assessed with the Short Form-36, further detailed in its Physical Component Summary (PCS) score and the Mental Component Summary (MCS) score. QoL was investigated at hospital admission, at discharge, and at 1 month, 6 months, and 1 year thereafter. There were 1654 patients undergoing fsAVR and 190 undergoing msAVR in the entire population. The fsAVR group showed a worse preoperative risk profile, a longer intensive care unit length of stay (59.7 hours vs 38.8 hours; p =.002), and a higher rate of life-threatening or disabling bleeding (4.1% vs 0%; P =.011); the msAVR group had a higher rate of early reintervention for failed index intervention (2.1% vs 0.5%; P =.001). QoL investigations showed better PCS and MCS at 1 month after fsAVR, but no temporal trend differences (PCS group-time P =.202; MCS group-time P =.141). Propensity-matched pairs showed comparable baseline characteristics and hospital outcomes (P = not significant for all end points) and comparable improvements of PCS and MCS over time, but no between-group difference s over time (PCS group time P =.834; MCS group time P =.737). Patients with similar baseline profiles report comparable hospital outcomes and comparable improvements of physical and mental health, up to 1 year after surgery, with both fsAVR and msAVR. As for QoL, ministernotomy does not seem to offer any advantage compared with the traditional approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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30. Sex-Based Difference in Aortic Dissection Outcomes: A Multicenter Study.
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Nappi, Francesco, Petiot, Sandra, Salsano, Antonio, Avtaar Singh, Sanjeet Singh, Berger, Joelle, Kostantinou, Marisa, Bonnet, Severine, Gambardella, Ivancarmine, Biancari, Fausto, Almazil, Almothana, Santini, Francesco, Chaara, Rim, and Fiore, Antonio
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- 2023
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31. Minimally invasive valve surgery: pushing boundaries over the eighty.
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Barbero, Cristina, Brenna, Dario, Salsano, Antonio, Pocar, Marco, Cura Stura, Erik, Calia, Claudia, Sebastiano, Viviana, Rinaldi, Mauro, and Ricci, Davide
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MITRAL valve surgery ,TRICUSPID valve surgery ,OCTOGENARIANS ,HYPERTENSION ,STATISTICS ,STATISTICAL significance ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MINIMALLY invasive procedures ,OPERATIVE surgery ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,LOG-rank test ,SURGICAL complications ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,FISHER exact test ,MANN Whitney U Test ,SEX distribution ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,T-test (Statistics) ,QUALITY of life ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio ,DATA analysis software ,CREATININE ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,OLD age - Abstract
BACKGROUND Mean age of patients with valves diseases is significantly increasing, and, in the near future, cardiac surgeons will have to deal with a considerable number of patients aged more than 80 years. The remarkable results gained by the minimally invasive approach have encouraged its application in more complex and fragile patients, such as older people. This study aimed to identify the rate of early mortality and major complications, and independent predictors for mid-term mortality in octogenarians undergoing minimally invasive valve surgery. METHODS Octogenarian patients undergoing right mini-thoracotomy mitral and/or tricuspid valve surgery between 2006 and 2020 were included. Primary endpoint was to identify independent predictors for mid-term mortality, and secondary endpoints were operative morality, stroke, independent predictors for early composite outcome, and quality of life at follow-up. RESULTS Analysis was performed on 130 patients. Stroke occurred in one patient (0.8%), while operative mortality was 6% (eight patients). One-year and five-year survival were 86% and 64%, respectively. Logistic regression identified age and creatinine level as independent predictors of mid-term mortality, survival analysis showed that age ≥ 84 years and creatinine level ≥ 1.22 mg/dL were the cut-off points for worst prognosis. Female gender and hypertension were found to be independent predictors of early composite outcome. CONCLUSIONS Results of the present study show that age alone should not be considered a contraindication for minimally invasive valve surgery. Identifying patients who are most likely to have survival and functional benefits after surgery is decisive to achieve optimal health outcomes and prevent futile procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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32. Impact of Mitral Regurgitation Recurrence on Mitral Valve Repair for Secondary Ischemic Mitral Regurgitation.
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Salsano, Antonio, Nenna, Antonio, Molinari, Nicolas, Avtaar Singh, Sanjeet Singh, Spadaccio, Cristiano, Santini, Francesco, Chello, Massimo, Fiore, Antonio, and Nappi, Francesco
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- 2023
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33. Surgical factors and complications affecting hospital outcome in redo mitral surgery: insights from a multicentre experience†
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Onorati, Francesco, Perrotti, Andrea, Reichart, Daniel, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Della Ratta, Ester, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Salsano, Antonio, Rubino, Antonio, Biancari, Fausto, Gatti, Giuseppe, Beghi, Cesare, De Feo, Marisa, Mignosa, Carmelo, Pappalardo, Aniello, Fischlein, Theodor, Chocron, Sidney, Detter, Christian, Santini, Francesco, and Faggian, Giuseppe
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- 2016
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34. Clinical profile and outcome of recurrent infective endocarditis.
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Citro, Rodolfo, Kwan-Leung Chan, Miglioranza, Marcelo Haertel, Laroche, Cécile, Benvenga, Rossella Maria, Furnaz, Shumaila, Magne, Julien, Olmos, Carmen, Paelinck, Bernard P., Pasquet, Agnès, Piper, Cornelia, Salsano, Antonio, Savouré, Arnaud, Seung Woo Park, Szymański, Piotr, Tattevin, Pierre, Camazon, Nuria Vallejo, Lancellotti, Patrizio, and Habib, Gilbert
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INFECTIVE endocarditis ,VENTRICULAR ejection fraction ,APACHE (Disease classification system) - Published
- 2022
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35. Late Myocardial Infarction and Repeat Revascularization after Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting in Patients with Prior Percutaneous Coronary Intervention †.
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Biancari, Fausto, Salsano, Antonio, Santini, Francesco, De Feo, Marisa, Dalén, Magnus, Zhang, Qiyao, Gatti, Giuseppe, Mazzaro, Enzo, Franzese, Ilaria, Bancone, Ciro, Zanobini, Marco, Tauriainen, Tuomas, Mäkikallio, Timo, Saccocci, Matteo, Francica, Alessandra, Rosato, Stefano, El-Dean, Zein, Onorati, Francesco, and Mariscalco, Giovanni
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CORONARY artery bypass , *PERCUTANEOUS coronary intervention , *MYOCARDIAL infarction - Abstract
Objectives: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the risk of late mortality and major adverse cardiovascular and cerebral events after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) in patients with prior percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Methods: A total of 2948 patients undergoing isolated CABGs were included in a prospective multicenter registry. Outcomes were adjusted for multiple covariates in logistic regression, Cox proportional hazards analysis and competing risk analysis. Results: In all, 2619 patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria of this analysis. Of them, 2199 (79.1%) had no history of PCI and 420 (20.9%) had a prior PCI. An adjusted analysis showed that a single prior PCI and multiple prior PCIs did not increase the risk of 30-day and 5-year mortality. Patients with multiple prior PCIs had a significantly higher risk of 5-year myocardial infarction (SHR 2.566, 95%CI 1.379–4.312) and repeat revascularization (SHR 1.774, 95%CI 1.140–2.763). Similarly, 30-day and 5-year mortality were not significantly increased in patients with prior PCI treatment of single or multiple vessels. Patients with multiple vessels treated with PCI had a significantly higher risk of 5-year myocardial infarction (SHR 2.640, 95%CI 1.497–4.658), repeat revascularization (SHR 1.648, 95%CI 1.029–2.638) and stroke (SHR 2.215, 95%CI 1.056–4.646) at 5-year. The risk for repeat revascularization was also increased with a prior single vessel PCI, but not for other outcomes. Conclusions: Among patients undergoing CABGs, multiple prior PCIs seem to increase the risk of late myocardial infarction and the need for repeat revascularization, but not the risk of mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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36. Outcomes of culture-negative vs. culture-positive infective endocarditis: the ESC-EORP EURO-ENDO registry.
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Kong, William K F, Salsano, Antonio, Giacobbe, Daniele Roberto, Popescu, Bogdan A, Laroche, Cécile, Duval, Xavier, Schueler, Robert, Moreo, Antonella, Colonna, Paolo, Piper, Cornelia, Calvo-Iglesias, Francisco, Badano, Luigi P, Srdanovic, Ilija, Boutoille, David, Huttin, Olivier, Stöhr, Elisabeth, Timóteo, Ana Teresa, Vaskelyte, Jolanta Justina, Sadeghpour, Anita, and Tornos, Pilar
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INFECTIVE endocarditis ,DISEASE progression ,CARDIAC surgery ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CARDIAC patients ,HEART valves - Abstract
Aim Fatality of infective endocarditis (IE) is high worldwide, and its diagnosis remains a challenge. The objective of the present study was to compare the clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with culture-positive (CPIE) vs. culture-negative IE (CNIE). Methods and results This was an ancillary analysis of the ESC-EORP EURO-ENDO registry. Overall, 3113 patients who were diagnosed with IE during the study period were included in the present study. Of these, 2590 (83.2%) had CPIE, whereas 523 (16.8%) had CNIE. As many as 1488 (48.1%) patients underwent cardiac surgery during the index hospitalization, 1259 (48.8%) with CPIE and 229 (44.5%) with CNIE. The CNIE was a predictor of 1-year mortality [hazard ratio (HR) 1.28, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.04–1.56], whereas surgery was significantly associated with survival (HR 0.49, 95% CI 0.41–0.58). The 1-year mortality was significantly higher in CNIE than CPIE patients in the medical subgroup, but it was not significantly different in CNIE vs. CPIE patients who underwent surgery. Conclusion The present analysis of the EURO-ENDO registry confirms a higher long-term mortality in patients with CNIE compared with patients with CPIE. This difference was present in patients receiving medical therapy alone and not in those who underwent surgery, with surgery being associated with reduced mortality. Additional efforts are required both to improve the aetiological diagnosis of IE and identify CNIE cases early before progressive disease potentially contraindicates surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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37. Mycobacterium tuberculosis Surgical Site Infection after Cardiac Surgery in the COVID-19 Era: A Case Report.
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Parolari, Giulia, Sepulcri, Chiara, Salsano, Antonio, Giacobbe, Daniele Roberto, Marchese, Anna, Barbieri, Ramona, Guadagno, Antonio, Spina, Bruno, Santini, Francesco, and Bassetti, Matteo
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SURGICAL site infections ,MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,CARDIAC surgery ,COVID-19 pandemic ,WOUND infections ,PROGNOSIS - Abstract
Infection of surgical wounds with acid-fast bacilli, including tubercle bacilli, is rare, and is poorly described in the literature. We present the case of a 74-year-old male who developed a sternal wound infection after cardiac surgery due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, diagnosed post-mortem. SARS-CoV-2 infection contributed to worsened clinical conditions and surgical site infection. A high degree of suspicion to avoid unnecessary treatments and progression to severe disease with dismal prognosis is necessary in these types of infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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38. Cardiac Surgery in Patients With Liver Cirrhosis (CASTER) Study: Early and Long-Term Outcomes.
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Garatti, Andrea, Daprati, Andrea, Cottini, Marzia, Russo, Claudio F., Dalla Tomba, Margherita, Troise, Giovanni, Salsano, Antonio, Santini, Francesco, Scrofani, Roberto, Nicolò, Francesca, Mikus, Elisa, Albertini, Alberto, Di Marco, Luca, Pacini, Davide, Picichè, Marco, Salvador, Loris, Actis Dato, Guglielmo M., Centofanti, Paolo, Paparella, Domenico, and Kounakis, Giorgios
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Patients with liver cirrhosis (LC) undergoing cardiac surgery (CS) face perioperative high mortality and morbidity, but extensive studies on this topic are lacking. All adult patients with LC undergoing a CS procedure between 2000 and 2017 at 10 Italian Institutions were included in this retrospective cohort study. LC was classified according to preoperative Child-Turcotte-Pugh (CTP) score and Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score. Early-term and medium-term outcomes analysis was performed in the overall population and according to CTP classes. The study population included 144 patients (mean age 66 ± 9 years, 69% male). Ninety-eight, 20, and 26 patients were in CTP class A, in early CTP class B (MELD score <12), or advanced CTP class B (MELD score >12), respectively. The main LC etiologies were viral (43%) and alcoholic (36%). Liver-related clinical presentation (ascites, esophageal varices, and encephalopathy) and laboratory values (estimated glomerular filtration rate, serum albumin, and bilirubin, platelet count) significantly worsened across the CTP classes (P =.001). Coronary artery bypass grafting or valve surgery (87% bioprosthesis) were performed in 36% and 50%, respectively. Postoperative complications (especially acute kidney injury, liver complication, and length of stay) significantly worsened in advanced CTP class B (P =.001). Notably, observed mortality was 3-fold or 4-fold higher than the EuroSCORE (European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation) II–predicted mortality, in the overall population, and in the subgroups. At Kaplan-Meier analysis, 1-year and 5-year cumulative survival in the overall population was 82% ± 3% and 77% ± 4%, respectively. The 5-year survival in CTP class A, early CTP class B, and advanced CTP class B was 72% ± 5%, 68% ± 11%, and 61% ± 10%, respectively (P =.238). CS outcomes in patients with LC are significantly affected in relation to the extent of preoperative liver dysfunction, but in early CTP classes, medium-term survival is acceptable. Further analysis are needed to better estimate the preoperative risk stratification of these patients. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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39. Surgery for Bentall endocarditis: short- and midterm outcomes from a multicentre registry.
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Sponga, Sandro, Mauro, Michele Di, Malvindi, Pietro G, Paparella, Domenico, Murana, Giacomo, Pacini, Davide, Weltert, Luca, Paulis, Ruggero De, Cappabianca, Giangiuseppe, Beghi, Cesare, Vincentiis, Carlo De, Parolari, Alessandro, Messina, Antonio, Troise, Giovanni, Salsano, Antonio, Santini, Francesco, Pierri, Michele D, Eusanio, Marco Di, Maselli, Daniele, and Dato, Guglielmo Actis
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ENDOCARDITIS ,PREOPERATIVE risk factors ,MULTIPLE organ failure ,SEPTIC shock ,MITRAL valve - Abstract
Open in new tab Download slide Open in new tab Download slide OBJECTIVES Endocarditis after the Bentall procedure is a severe disease often complicated by a pseudoaneurysm or mediastinitis. Reoperation is challenging but conservative therapy is not effective. The aim of this study was to assess short- and midterm outcomes of patients reoperated on for Bentall-related endocarditis. METHODS Seventy-three patients with Bentall procedure-related endocarditis were recorded in the Italian registry. The mean age was 57 ± 14 years and 92% were men; preoperative comorbidities included hypertension (45%), diabetes (12%) and renal failure (11%). The logistic EuroSCORE was 25%; the EuroSCORE II was 8%. RESULTS Preoperatively, 12% of the patients were in septic shock; left ventricular-aortic discontinuity was present in 63% and mitral valve involvement occurred in 12%. The most common pathogens were Staphylococcus aureus (22%) and Streptococci (14%). Reoperations after a median interval of 30 months (1–221 months) included a repeat Bentall with a bioconduit (41%), a composite mechanical (33%) or biological valved conduit (19%) and a homograft (6%). In 1 patient, a heart transplant was required (1%); in 12%, a mitral valve procedure was needed. The hospital mortality rate was 15%. The postoperative course was complicated by renal failure (19%), major bleeding (14%), pulmonary failure (14%), sepsis (11%) and multiorgan failure (8%). At multivariate analysis, urgent surgery was a risk factor for early death [hazard ratio 20.5 (1.9–219)]. Survival at 5 and 8 years was 75 ± 6% and 71 ± 7%, with 3 cases of endocarditis relapse. CONCLUSIONS Surgery is effective in treating endocarditis following the Bentall procedure although it is associated with high perioperative mortality and morbidity rates. Endocarditis relapse seems to be uncommon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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40. Risk Factors for Candidemia After Open Heart Surgery: Results From a Multicenter Case–Control Study.
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Giacobbe, Daniele Roberto, Salsano, Antonio, Puente, Filippo Del, Miette, Ambra, Vena, Antonio, Corcione, Silvia, Bartoletti, Michele, Mularoni, Alessandra, Maraolo, Alberto Enrico, Peghin, Maddalena, Carnelutti, Alessia, Losito, Angela Raffaella, Raffaelli, Francesca, Gentile, Ivan, Maccari, Beatrice, Frisone, Stefano, Pascale, Renato, Mikus, Elisa, Medaglia, Alice Annalisa, and Conoscenti, Elena
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CANDIDEMIA , *CARDIAC surgery , *CROSS infection , *CASE-control method , *CARDIOPULMONARY bypass , *INTENSIVE care units - Abstract
Background Candida species are among the most frequent causative agents of health care–associated bloodstream infections, with mortality >40% in critically ill patients. Specific populations of critically ill patients may present peculiar risk factors related to their reason for intensive care unit admission. The primary objective of the present study was to assess the predictors of candidemia after open heart surgery. Methods This retrospective, matched case–control study was conducted in 8 Italian hospitals from 2009 to 2016. The primary study objective was to assess factors associated with the development of candidemia after open heart surgery. Results Overall, 222 patients (74 cases and 148 controls) were included in the study. Candidemia developed at a median time (interquartile range) of 23 (14–36) days after surgery. In multivariable analysis, independent predictors of candidemia were New York Heart Association class III or IV (odds ratio [OR], 23.81; 95% CI, 5.73–98.95; P < .001), previous therapy with carbapenems (OR, 8.87; 95% CI, 2.57–30.67; P = .001), and previous therapy with fluoroquinolones (OR, 5.73; 95% CI, 1.61–20.41; P = .007). Crude 30-day mortality of candidemia was 53% (39/74). Septic shock was independently associated with mortality in the multivariable model (OR, 5.64; 95% CI, 1.91–16.63; P = .002). No association between prolonged cardiopulmonary bypass time and candidemia was observed in this study. Conclusions Previous broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy and high NYHA class were independent predictors of candidemia in cardiac surgery patients with prolonged postoperative intensive care unit stay. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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41. On-pump beating-heart coronary artery bypass grafting in high-risk patients: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Dominici, Carmelo, Salsano, Antonio, Nenna, Antonio, Spadaccio, Cristiano, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Santini, Francesco, and Chello, Massimo
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CORONARY artery bypass , *INTRA-aortic balloon counterpulsation , *REVASCULARIZATION (Surgery) , *META-analysis , *MYOCARDIAL revascularization , *SURGICAL complications , *CARDIOGENIC shock , *MYOCARDIAL infarction complications , *STROKE prevention , *RELATIVE medical risk , *LEFT ventricular dysfunction , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *CORONARY artery disease , *DISEASE complications ,PREVENTION of surgical complications - Abstract
Background: Operative technique for surgical myocardial revascularization in high-risk patients remains an argument of debate. On-pump coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) with cardioplegic arrest and off-pump CABG have intrinsic limitations. The hybrid approach of on-pump beating-heart CABG (OPBHC) has been proposed over the years with conflicting results. This systematic review and meta-analysis intends to summarize the contemporary literature.Methods: A literature search was conducted through major electronic databases. The systematic review provided a total of 279 articles, of those 17 studies were included in the present study.Results: Compared with on-pump CABG, OPBHC patients showed a preoperative higher risk profile but had reduced early mortality (risk ratio [RR], 0.59, 95% CI, 0.36-0.97) and reduced postoperative stroke (RR, 0.60, 95% CI, 0.39-0.91). Also, interesting trends towards reduced postoperative intra-aortic balloon pump use (RR, 0.56, 95% CI, 0.31-1.01) and myocardial infarction (RR, 0.48, 95% CI, 0.22-1.07) were observed. Baseline characteristics and postoperative complications were similar between OPBHC and off-pump CABG, but limited data are available. The risk of incomplete revascularization in OPBHC is lower than off-pump CABG (RR, 0.53, 95% CI, 0.33-0.87) but higher than conventional on-pump CABG (RR, 1.71, 95% CI, 1.23-2.39).Conclusion: OPBHC is an effective technique to perform surgical revascularization in high-risk patients as preventing haemodynamic deterioration and guaranteeing adequate end-organ perfusion. OPBHC represents an alternative technique to on-pump and off-pump CABG, in those cases in which complications deriving from cardioplegic arrest or manipulation of the heart are more likely. For these reasons, OPBHC might be useful in patients with recent myocardial infarction or with left ventricular dysfunction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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42. Hospital Volume and Outcome after Bilateral Internal Mammary Artery Grafting.
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Perrotti, Andrea, Reichart, Daniel, Gatti, Giuseppe, Faggian, Giuseppe, Onorati, Francesco, De Feo, Marisa, Chocron, Sidney, Dalén, Magnus, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Rubino, Antonino S., Maselli, Daniele, Gherli, Riccardo, Salsano, Antonio, Nicolini, Francesco, Zanobini, Marco, Bounader, Karl, Rosato, Stefano, Tauriainen, Tuomas, Juvonen, Tatu, and Mariscalco, Giovanni
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- 2020
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43. Failure to achieve a satisfactory cardiac outcome after isolated coronary surgery in low-risk patients.
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Rubino, Antonino S, Nicolini, Francesco, Tauriainen, Tuomas, Demal, Till, Feo, Marisa De, Onorati, Francesco, Faggian, Giuseppe, Bancone, Ciro, Perrotti, Andrea, Chocron, Sidney, Dalén, Magnus, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Fischlein, Theodor, Maselli, Daniele, Musumeci, Francesco, Santini, Francesco, Salsano, Antonio, Zanobini, Marco, Saccocci, Matteo, and Bounader, Karl
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- 2020
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44. Right ventricular assessment can improve prognostic value of Euroscore II.
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Di Mauro, Michele, Scrofani, Roberto, Antona, Carlo, Nicolò, Francesca, Cappabianca, Giangiuseppe, Beghi, Cesare, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Gregorini, Renato, Di Marco, Luca, Pacini, Davide, Salsano, Antonio, Santini, Francesco, Weltert, Luca, De Paulis, Ruggero, Pano, Marco, Zaccaria, Salvatore, D'Alfonso, Alessandro, Di Eusanio, Marco, Massi, Francesco, and Portoghese, Michele
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HOSPITAL mortality ,CARDIAC surgery ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CARDIAC research ,RESEARCH teams ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,RELATIVE medical risk ,RESEARCH ,RIGHT heart ventricle ,PATHOLOGICAL anatomy ,PREOPERATIVE period ,RESEARCH methodology ,PROGNOSIS ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEART ventricles ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RIGHT ventricular dysfunction ,HEART physiology - Abstract
Background: The aim of this multicenter prospective study was to evaluate the prognostic weight of preoperative right ventricular assessment on early mortality in cardiac surgery.Methods: This is a multicenter prospective observational study performed by the Italian Group of Research for Outcome in Cardiac Surgery (GIROC) including 11 centers. From October 2017 to March 2019, out of 923 patients undergoing cardiac surgery, 28 patients with some missing data were excluded and 895 patients were enrolled in the study right ventricular dilatation was defined as a basal end-diastolic diameter >42 mm. The right ventricle (RV) function was assessed using the combination of three parameters: fractional area changing (FAC), tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE), and S'-wave using tissue Doppler imaging (TDI-S'); RV dysfunction was defined as the presence of at least two of the following cutoffs: FAC <35%, TAPSE <17 mm, and TDI S' <9.5 mm RESULTS: Among the entire cohort, 624 (70%) showed normal RV, 92 (10%) isolated RV dilatation, 154 (17%) isolated RV dysfunction, and 25 (3%) both RV dilatation and dysfunction. Non-surviving patients showed a significantly higher rate of RV alteration at multivariable analysis, RV status was found to be an independent predictor for higher in-hospital mortality beside Euroscore II.Conclusions: This prospective multicenter observation study shows the importance to assess RV preoperatively and to include both RV function and dimension in a risk score model such as Euroscore II to implement its predictivity, since PH cannot always mirror the status of the right ventricle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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45. Computational fluid dynamics of a novel perfusion strategy during hybrid thoracic aortic repair.
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Mariscalco, Giovanni, Fragomeni, Gionata, Vainas, Tryfon, Hadjinikolaou, Leonidas, Biancari, Fausto, Benedetto, Umberto, Salsano, Antonio, Gaudio, Lina T., Jiritano, Federica, Mastroroberto, Pasquale, and Serraino, Giuseppe F.
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COMPUTATIONAL fluid dynamics ,CAROTID endarterectomy ,PERFUSION ,CEREBRAL revascularization ,SURGICAL complications ,THORACIC aorta ,VERTEBRAL artery ,BLOOD vessel prosthesis ,CAROTID artery diseases ,HEMODYNAMICS ,SUBCLAVIAN artery - Abstract
Background and Aim: To mitigate the risk of perioperative neurological complications during frozen elephant trunk procedures, we aimed to computationally evaluate the effects of direct cerebral perfusion strategy through a left carotid-subclavian bypass on hemodynamics in a patient-specific thoracic aorta model.Methods: Between July 2016 and March 2019, 11 consecutive patients underwent frozen elephant trunk operation using the left carotid-subclavian bypass with a side graft anastomosis and right-axillary cannulation for systemic and brain perfusion. A multiscale model realized coupling three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics was developed and validated with in vivo data. Model comparison with direct antegrade cannulation of all epiaortic vessels was performed. Wall shear stress, wall shear stress spatial gradient, and localized normalized helicity were selected as hemodynamic indicators. Four cerebral perfusion flows were tested (6 to 15 mL/kg/min).Results: Direct cerebral perfusion of the left subclavian bypass resulted in higher flow rates with augmented speeds in all epiaortic vessels in comparison with traditional perfusion model. At the level of the left vertebral artery (LVA), a speed of 22.5 vs 21 mL/min and mean velocity of 3.07 vs 2.93 cm/s were registered, respectively. With a cerebral perfusion flow of 15 mL/kg, lower LVA wall shear stress (1.596 vs 2.030 N/m2 ), and wall shear stress gradient (1445 vs 5882 N/m3 ) were observed. A less disturbed flow considering the localized normalized helicity was documented. No patients experienced neurological/spinal cord damages.Conclusions: Direct perfusion of a left carotid bypass proved to be cerebroprotective, resulting in a more physiological and stable anterior and posterior cerebral perfusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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46. String of pearls thrombosis of the left ventricle after myocardial infarction.
- Author
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Salsano, Antonio, Bertramino, Matilde, Pastorino, Luisiana, Porto, Italo, and Santini, Francesco
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- 2023
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47. Epidemiology and outcome of Klebsiellapneumoniae carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (KPC-KP) infections in cardiac surgery patients: a brief narrative review.
- Author
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Del Puente, Filippo, Giacobbe, Daniele R., Salsano, Antonio, Maraolo, Alberto E., Ong, David S.Y., Yusuf, Erlangga, Tutino, Stefania, Marchese, Anna, Santini, Francesco, and Viscoli, Claudio
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- 2019
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48. Neurological outcomes after on-pump vs off-pump CABG in patients with cerebrovascular disease.
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Dominici, Carmelo, Salsano, Antonio, Nenna, Antonio, Spadaccio, Cristiano, El‐Dean, Zein, Bashir, Mohamad, Mariscalco, Giovanni, Santini, Francesco, Chello, Massimo, and El-Dean, Zein
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CEREBROVASCULAR disease , *TRANSIENT ischemic attack , *CORONARY artery bypass , *SURGICAL complications , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background and Aim Of the Study: The possible association of off-pump coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) with reduced risk of postoperative stroke and enhanced benefits in high-risk patients support the hypothesis that patients with a positive history of cerebrovascular disease would benefit from off-pump coronary surgery. This study aims to investigate the impact of off-pump CABG on the incidence of postoperative neurologic events in patients with a previous history of cerebrovascular disease.Methods: From January 2015 to September 2018, 414 patients underwent isolated CABG with a previous history of transient ischemic attack (TIA) or stroke: 295 patients had on-pump CABG and 119 patients had off-pump CABG. Neurological outcomes of interest are postoperative stroke (transient or permanent), delirium requiring pharmacological treatment or a combination of both, collectively defined "Major Adverse Neurological Events" (MANE). Propensity score (PS) adjusted analysis has been used for regression models.Results: Off-pump CABG carried a lower incidence of postoperative stroke (3.4% vs 9.8%, P = .046, PS-adjusted odds ratio 0.34 with P = .044). Postoperative delirium occurred more than twice as often in the on-pump group (11.5% vs 4.2%, P = .034, PS-adjusted odds ratio 2.78 with P = .043). The composite outcome of MANE occurred in 20.3% in the on-pump group, and in 7.6% in the off-pump group (P = .003). Other complications were similar between groups.Conclusions: In patients with a previous TIA or stroke, off-pump CABG is associated with a reduced risk of stroke, delirium, and postoperative adverse neurological events, compared to on-pump CABG. Patients with high neurological risk can potentially benefit from off-pump CABG, due to an overall reduction of postoperative neurological complications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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49. Impact of preoperative thrombocytopenia on the outcome after coronary artery bypass grafting.
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Nammas, Wail, Dalén, Magnus, Rosato, Stefano, Gherli, Riccardo, Reichart, Daniel, Gatti, Giuseppe, Onorati, Francesco, Faggian, Giuseppe, De Feo, Marisa, Bancone, Ciro, Chocron, Sidney, Khodabandeh, Sorosh, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Rubino, Antonino S., Maselli, Daniele, Nardella, Saverio, Salsano, Antonio, Gherli, Tiziano, Nicolini, Francesco, and Zanobini, Marco
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PLATELET count ,CORONARY artery bypass ,THROMBOCYTOPENIA ,INTENSIVE care units ,CARDIAC surgery ,WOUND infections - Abstract
The impact of thrombocytopenia on postoperative bleeding and other major adverse events after cardiac surgery is unclear. This issue was investigated in a series of patients who underwent isolated coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) from the prospective, multicenter E-CABG registry. Preoperative thrombocytopenia was defined as preoperative platelet count <150 × 10
9 /L and it was considered moderate-severe when preoperative platelet count was <100 × 109 /L. Multilevel mixed-effects regression analysis was performed to adjust the effect of thrombocytopenia on outcomes for baseline and operative covariates as well as for interinstitutional differences in patient-blood management. Among 7189 patients included in this analysis, 599 (8.3%) had preoperative thrombocytopenia. Patient with preoperative thrombocytopenia had an increased chest drainage output at 12 h (mean, 519 vs. 456 mL, adjusted coeff. 39, 95%CI 18–60) and rates of severe-massive bleeding (Universal Definition of Perioperative Bleeding (UDPB) severity grades 3–4: 12.7% vs. 8.1%, adjusted OR 1.47, 95%CI 1.11–1.93; E-CABG bleeding severity grades 2–3: 10.4% vs. 6.1%, adjusted OR 1.78, 95%CI 1.30–2.43). Thrombocytopenia was associated with an increased risk of hospital/30-day death (3.2% vs. 1.9%, adjusted OR 2.02, 95%CI 1.20–3.42), 1-year death (5.7% vs. 3.4%, adjusted HR 1.68, 95%CI 1.16–2.44), deep sternal wound infection (3.5% vs. 2.4%, adjusted OR 1.65, 95%CI 1.02–2.66), acute kidney injury (28.1% vs. 22.2%, OR 1.45, 1.18–1.78), and prolonged stay in the intensive care unit (mean, 3.6 vs 2.8 days, adjusted coeff. 0.74, 95%CI 0.40–1.09). Similar results were observed in a subset of patients with moderate-severe thrombocytopenia (51 patients, 0.7%). In particular, these patients had a markedly higher rate of acute kidney injury (40%, adjusted OR, 1.94, 95%CI 1.05–3.57), resternotomy for bleeding (7.8%, adjusted OR 3.49, 95%CI 1.20–10.21), and severe-massive bleeding (UDPB severity grades 3–4: 23.5%, adjusted OR 3.08, 95%CI 1.52–6.22; E-CABG bleeding severity grades 2–3: 23.5%, adjusted OR 4.43, 95%CI 2.15–9.15) compared to patients with normal preoperative platelet count. Mild preoperative thrombocytopenia is associated with increased risk of severe-massive bleeding, mortality, and other major adverse events after CABG. Such risks are markedly increased in patients with moderate-severe preoperative thrombocytopenia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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50. Prognostic Impact of Multiple Prior Percutaneous Coronary Interventions in Patients Undergoing Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting.
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Biancari, Fausto, Dalén, Magnus, Ruggieri, Vito G., Demal, Till, Gatti, Giuseppe, Onorati, Francesco, Faggian, Giuseppe, Rubino, Antonino S., Maselli, Daniele, Gherli, Riccardo, Salsano, Antonio, Saccocci, Matteo, Santarpino, Giuseppe, Nicolini, Francesco, Tauriainen, Tuomas, De Feo, Marisa, Airaksinen, Juhani, Rosato, Stefano, Perrotti, Andrea, and Mariscalco, Giovanni
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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