Off-Pump Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting With Use of the Octopus 2 Stabilization System.

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2000

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Top 10%
Influence
Top 10%
Popularity
Average

Research Projects

Journal Issue

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The treatment of coronary artery disease has evolved rapidly over the last two decades. The gold standard of surgical revascularization, the on-pump coronary artery bypass graft, has been challenged by the development of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. Our experience with the alternative of the off-pump ("beating heart") coronary artery bypass (OPCAB) technique during a period of 18 months suggests that OPCAB avoids the complications of cardiopulmonary bypass and offers patients the benefit of long-term graft patency that greatly exceeds that of current endovascular technologies. METHODS: The early results of 126 OPCAB procedures performed through a medial sternotomy incision during a period of 18 months were evaluated. There were 80 male and 46 female patients, with a mean age of 69 +/- 4.3 years. Emergency cases and reoperations were not included. A total of 268 anastomoses were performed, with a mean number of 2.12 anastomoses per patient. Conduits used, with their percentage of use, were: left internal thoracic artery (LITA) (100%), right internal thoracic artery (11.1%), greater saphenous vein (84%), and radial artery (31%). In 72% of the cases, off-pump surgery was chosen because of patient risk factors such as atherosclerotic aortic disease, previous cerebrovascular accident or carotid artery disease, renal dysfunction, malignancy or poor left ventricular function. RESULTS: There was no operative mortality. One-month postoperative mortality was three patients (2.3%). Two died because of mesenteric ischemia, and the other death was due to cardiac failure. Seventy-one patients had a control angiogram before discharge. The patency of LITA anastomosis was 100% while overall patency rate was 95%. In 43 patients for whom an angiogram could not be performed, a Thallum 201 stress test was performed three months postoperatively. Thirty-eight patients had a normal test while five patients showed signs of ischemia. These patients had a control angiogram: in four patients anastomoses were patent, but in one patient there was a severe narrowing of a venous anastomosis to the distal right coronary artery (RCA) which was corrected with angioplasty. In the whole series eight patients (6.3%) refused to have any control examination. CONCLUSIONS: Our early results suggest that off-pump CABG with Octopus 2 (Medtronic, Inc., Minneapolis, MN) can be a good alternative in high risk patients who need multiple vessel revascularization.

Description

Keywords

[No Keyword Available], survival rate, Male, graft survival, Coronary Disease, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Postoperative Complications, male, coronary artery bypass graft, middle aged, follow up, Humans, postoperative complication, human, Prospective Studies, Coronary Artery Bypass, vascular patency, Vascular Patency, Aged, instrumentation, Cardiopulmonary Bypass, Equipment Safety, Graft Survival, article, risk assessment, methodology, Middle Aged, mortality, Survival Rate, aged, female, Treatment Outcome, N/A, physiology, treatment outcome, Female, cardiopulmonary bypass, coronary artery disease, equipment, hospitalization, prospective study, Follow-Up Studies

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine

Citation

WoS Q

Q4

Scopus Q

Q4
OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
13

Source

The heart surgery forum

Volume

3

Issue

4

Start Page

282

End Page

286
PlumX Metrics
Citations

Scopus : 17

PubMed : 1

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 33

SCOPUS™ Citations

17

checked on Feb 02, 2026

Page Views

6

checked on Feb 02, 2026

Google Scholar Logo
Google Scholar™
OpenAlex Logo
OpenAlex FWCI
1.95248555

Sustainable Development Goals

3

GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING Logo

4

QUALITY EDUCATION
QUALITY EDUCATION Logo