An histological comparison was made between left internal mammary arteries (LIMAs) harvested and prepared with different techniques prior to coronary artery bypass grafting. The mobilization of LIMA was made as follows: conventional technique (group I), extra pleural takedown with lysis of the endothoracic fascia (group II), and LIMA skeletonization (group III). Each group was divided into two other sub-groups according to the LIMA graft preparation: papaverine-saline solution sprayed on the pedicle (sub-group A) and intraluminal hydrostatic dilatation (sub-group B). Free blood flow from the LIMAs was measured immediately before cardiopulmonary bypass and ultrasonic duplex scanning (UDS) was performed to analyze the flow patterns and velocities during the early postoperative course. The results showed that the technique by which the LIMA is harvested bears no significant relationship to microscopical graft damage, while intimal lesions were observed in all sub-groups that adopted intraluminal hydrostatic dilatation (sub-group B). No difference in intraoperative LIMA flows were noted between groups and sub-groups of patients except in the case of group I-sub-group B, in which the flow was markedly reduced. Intramural haematoma or subadventitial blood effusion was observed with low incidence and magnitude in all groups and subgroups of patients, without any reduction of blood flow, and all LIMAs were patent at UDS measurements. In conclusion, the results showed that the method by which the IMA is harvested bears little and insignificant relationship to arterial wall damage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
We compared mortality rates league tables for six cardiac surgery centres developed using an administrative database (integrated with information on patients' EuroSCORE) with those drawn from a specialised clinical database. Data from 4017 patients undergoing cardiac surgery over the period January 1st-December 31st 2003, and identified both databases were used. Case mix adjusted in-hospital mortality rates were estimated relying on information provided by each database, and league tables were drawn from both. The correlation between the two league tables was assessed through the Spearman correlation coefficient. League tables drawn from the two sources identified the same 'best' and 'worst' centres and the Spearman correlation coefficient confirmed a high level of agreement between the two rankings (r=0.89; P<0.02). Use of the logistic EuroSCORE instead of the additive one did not change the results. An administrative and a clinical specialised database provided similar league tables. However, this finding by no means implies that clinical databases should be abandoned. While administrative data allow a more efficient performance assessment, clinical databases may more properly satisfy the legitimate demand of surgical staff of being directly involved in quality monitoring, rather than being mere passive objects of external assessment.
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