In cardiac surgery, supplementation with recombinant factor VIIa is the treatment of choice for patients with factor VII deficiency, but overzealous administration can be associated with thromboembolic side-effects. A 53-year-old man with factor VII activity 15.2%, international normalized ratio 2.9, and acute thrombotic critical coronary anatomy, underwent coronary artery bypass surgery and a thoracotomy with decortication 5 months later. He was managed successfully without recombinant factor VIIa supplementation. This case demonstrates that current bedside and laboratory tests such as thromboelastography, prothrombin time or international normalized ratio, and factor VII activity may not predict replacement therapy in these patients.
Heyde’s syndrome (HS) is described as the association between recurrent bleeding from angiodysplasia of the gastrointestinal tract and aortic stenosis. Aortic valve replacement has been reported to stop the bleeding. In unfit patients, the options available are interventional or conservative management. We hereby report an elderly obese patient with severe comorbidity with complicated HS involving a narrow aortic root. She underwent left ventricular outlet myomectomy and aortic root replacement to promote better forward flow and prevent restenosis and recurrence of symptoms. She was discharged home symptom-free despite being on coumadin anticoagulants.
An 8-year-old girl with severe mitral regurgitation presented with symptoms of heart failure. Clinical investigations did not raise suspicion of an absent left pericardium. Congenital defects of the pericardium are rare and frequently associated with other cardiac lesions. We describe a case of severe mitral regurgitation in a child in whom an absent left-sided pericardium with hypoplasia of left lung was found incidentally during surgery to repair the mitral valve. We believe such associations with other heart diseases is usually circumstantial but can influence the perioperative morbidity, length of hospital stay, and even alter the surgical management.
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