Cor Vasa 2011, 53(3):151-153 | DOI: 10.33678/cor.2011.034

Is severe pulmonary hypertension always a contraindication to surgery?

Michael Jonák*, Janka Škrobáková, Jan Pirk
Klinika kardiovaskulární chirurgie, Institut klinické a experimentální medicíny, Praha, Česká republika

We report the case of a 69-year-old man pronounced ineligible for surgery by many cardiologists and cardiac surgeons on grounds of inadequately high risk because of his serious cardiac disease combined with severe pulmonary hypertension. Despite his serious condition, the patient had successful surgery after some additional examinations and at his own request. The patient had three-vessel coronary disease, severe degenerative aortic stenosis, severe diffuse left ventricular hypokinesia (EF = 25%) as well as a degenerative mitral valve defect with predominant regurgitation (3-4/5). After several examinations, the pulmonary hypertension was classified as severe mixed pulmonary hypertension with a major precapillary component (systolic pulmonary artery pressure about 80 mmHg, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure [PCW] 35 mmHg). Surgery was realized after successful right-heart catheterization with nitrogen oxide (NO) administration, resulting in decreases in the transpulmonary gradient (TPG) and pulmonary arterial resistance (PAR). The procedure was performed on cardiopulmonary bypass with blood cardioplegia. The patient had his aortic and mitral valves replaced with bioprostheses followed by triple coronary artery bypass surgery. Postoperative care of the patient required increased inotropic support combined with NO inhalation. The patient spent four days at the resuscitation unit to be discharged from hospital on postop day 15 and transferred to receive early postop rehabilitation at Poděbrady Spa.

Keywords: Pulmonary hypertension; NO inhalation; Off-pump surgery

Published: March 1, 2011  Show citation

ACS AIP APA ASA Harvard Chicago Chicago Notes IEEE ISO690 MLA NLM Turabian Vancouver
Jonák M, Škrobáková J, Pirk J. Is severe pulmonary hypertension always a contraindication to surgery? Cor Vasa. 2011;53(3):151-153. doi: 10.33678/cor.2011.034.
Download citation

References

  1. Popelová J, et al. Doporučené postupy pro diagnostiku a léčbu chlopenních srdečních vad v dospělosti. Cor Vasa 2007;49(Suppl.):6-45.
  2. Hampl V, Berger J. Patofyziologie plicního oběhu. In: Vízek M, Ošťádal B. Patologická fyziologie srdce a cév, Praha: Karolinum, 2005.
  3. Widimský J. Etiologie a patogeneze plicní arteriální hypertenze. Cor Vasa 2006;48:108-113. Go to original source...




Cor et Vasa

You are accessing a site intended for medical professionals, not the lay public. The site may also contain information that is intended only for persons authorized to prescribe and dispense medicinal products for human use.

I therefore confirm that I am a healthcare professional under Act 40/1995 Coll. as amended by later regulations and that I have read the definition of a healthcare professional.