The pathogenesis of cardiogenic shock (CS) has evolved from an acute event due to a large myocardial infarction to a semiacute event due to rapid hemodynamic deterioration on a background of preexisting left ventricular systolic dysfunction. Pre-CS refers to the period of rapid hemodynamic deterioration that precedes overt CS with hypotension, inflammatory response, and end-organ failure. Mortality remains extremely high in CS and has not improved over the past decades. Pre-CS offers a unique opportunity to initiate early treatment that may result in better clinical outcomes. The present review addresses the definition, recognition, and management of pre-CS with the pharmacologic or mechanical support of the failing left ventricle.
Atherosclerosis develops and rapidly progresses in saphenous veins grafts after coronary bypass surgery. In contrast to native coronary artery, percutaneous revascularization does not impede the progression of saphenous vein atherosclerosis and saphenous vein graft failure commonly ensues. The protracted patency of arterial grafts is likely to account for most of the long-term superiority of coronary artery bypass surgery over percutaneous revascularization in patients with complex coronary artery disease. Long-lasting, complete coronary revascularization may be best achieved by combining surgical arterial grafting of diseased coronary arteries to percutaneous revascularization with drug-eluting stents than by the continued use of saphenous vein grafts.
Combined surgical and percutaneous coronary revascularization, ie, hybrid coronary revascularization (HCR) consists of surgical left internal mammary artery (LIMA) bypass to the left anterior descending artery (LAD) and percutaneous revascularization of other diseased coronary arteries. Developed as a 1-stage procedure, HCR has not been widely adopted by the cardiovascular community. The recommended minimally invasive approach through a small left thoracotomy incision is technically demanding, and same-day percutaneous revascularization requires a hybrid operating room that is not available in most hospitals. In this review, we consider present HCR protocols, barriers to widespread adoption of HCR, and we give special attention to the surgical approach for the LIMA graft to the LAD and the timing of percutaneous revascularization. We conclude that grafting the LIMA to the LAD through a median sternotomy approach and delaying the percutaneous revascularization may facilitate the widespread use of HCR in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease and a low to intermediate Synergy between Percutaneous Coronary Intervention with Taxus and Cardiac Surgery score.
Hybrid coronary revascularization incorporates a surgical anastomosis of the left internal mammary artery to the left anterior descending coronary artery through a thoracotomy and percutaneous implantation of drug eluting stents in diseased non-left anterior descending coronary arteries. Hybrid coronary artery revascularization can be performed as a 1-stage procedure in a hybrid operating room or as a tightly scheduled 2-stage procedure. Hybrid coronary artery revascularization is seldom the selected modality for coronary revascularization due to the lack of a hybrid operating room in many hospitals, the recommended thoracotomy approach for bypass, or the rigid schedule of surgical and endovascular revascularization. A 2-stage approach, using a sternotomy as compared to standard thoracotomy, and a flexible schedule between surgical and endovascular procedures may facilitate the adoption of hybrid coronary revascularization with noncomplex multi-vessel stable coronary artery disease.
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