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Improvement of Survival Rate in Patients with Cardiogenic Shock by Using Nonpulsatile and Pulsatile Ventricular Assist Device
37
Citations
9
References
1992
Year
Heart FailureAdult Cardiac SurgeryCardiac AnaesthesiaDevice TherapyVentricle Assist DeviceCardiopulmonary TransplantationAcute Myocardial InfarctionSepsisCardiologyCardiothoracic SurgerySurvival RateAssisted CirculationJanuary 1988Cardiac ArrestCardiogenic ShockCardiovascular DiseasePatient SafetyMechanical Circulatory SupportMedicineHeart TransplantationEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
Between January 1988 and January 1992, 65 patients (pts) had a ventricle assist device (VAD) inserted in our clinic. In 24 pts a VAD was applied because of primarily unsuccessful weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass (Group A). In a further 24 pts (Group B) a VAD was installed for the therapy of refractive cardiogenic shock (CS) after initially successful cardiac surgery (n = 21) and after acute myocardial infarction (n = 3). Twelve pts were bridged to heart transplantation (Group C) and five had a VAD inserted for various other reasons (Group D). In 36 (55.4%) of the total 65 pts a nonpulsatile VAD (Biomedicus 540) was used: 10 in Group A; 20 in B, 3 in C and 3 in D. In 29 pts (44.6%) a pulsatile VAD (Abiomed BVS 5000) was used: 14 in Group A, 4 in B, 9 in C and 2 in D. Weaning rate and long-term survival rates were 50% and 46% respectively in Group A and 38% and 42% in Group B. Seven pts from Group C were transplanted and six are long-term survivors. Two pts (40%) in Group D were discharged from hospital. Major postoperative complications were bleeding (46%), thromboembolism (14%), multiple organ failure (11%), renal failure (11%), arterial embolism (4.6%), sepsis (3%). The results indicate that application of a VAD can be recommended in pts with postcardiotomy CS to allow recovery of cardiac function and in pts with irreversible ventricular damage as bridging to HTX.
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