By Randy Dotinga HealthDay ReporterTUESDAY,
April 20 (HealthDayNews) -- Since the advent of coronary bypass
operations four decades ago, surgeons have temporarily stilled the
hearts of their patients during surgery by hooking them up to
heart-lung machines. Now, new research suggests patients do
just as well -- and at a lower cost -- when cardiologists let the heart
keep beating on its own during the procedure. According to an
Emory University study, patients who had "off-pump" coronary artery
operations were just as likely as traditional patients to experience
the same results a year after their bypasses. Some experts think the
off-pump operations are more tolerable, too. "This
operation is more challenging for the surgeon but easier on the
patient," said study co-author Dr. John D. Puskas, an associate
professor of surgery at Emory.
The study findings appear in the April 21 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association . The research was partially funded by Medtronic Inc., a medical device company that employs Puskas as a consultant. Off-pump
coronary operations aren't quite routine in American hospitals yet,
however. In 2002, only an estimated 21 percent of bypass operations
were done without the use of a heart-and-lung machine. That
number may go up as surgeons learn about the procedure and become more
experienced with it, Puskas said. "This study will help to give
surgeons the confidence that the operation can yield patients the
benefits of the old operation." Bypass operations have become
quite common in the United States. An estimated 500,000 Americans have
the procedures each year, and former patients include David Letterman
and Vice President Dick Cheney. "It's a very frequently performed
operation with great results," Puskas said. In the operations,
surgeons act like police officers sending traffic around an accident.
Using grafts, they reroute arteries past blockages so blood can flow
easily in and out of the heart. Typically, surgeons hook
patients up to heart-lung machines that oxygenate blood and return it
to the body. Both the heart and the lungs are temporarily stilled as
the surgeon works. "The heart-lung machine basically serves the
surgeon," Puskas said. "It makes the heart lay still. The heart-lung
machine provides no benefit to the patient." Unfortunately, the
blood's contact with artificial surfaces can cause the immune system
to kick in, causing inflammation throughout the body, Puskas said. In
some patients, especially those who are older and sicker, that
inflammation can spell trouble. Operations using a heart-lung
pump also require more transfused blood and could impair brain activity
after surgery, added Dr. Eric Eichhorn, a cardiologist at the Dallas
Heart Group in Texas. During the past several years, more
surgeons have turned to off-pump procedures. The percentage of off-pump
bypasses has jumped by seven times since the late 1990s, Puskas said. Surgeons
avoid the need for the heart-lung machines by using mechanical devices
to hold part of the heart steady during the operations. From
2000 to 2001, Puskas and colleagues studied 197 patients 30 days after
their bypass operations and followed up with 185 of them a year later. The
grafts of the patients held up at about the same level in both groups,
as were the rates of death, stroke, angina and heart attack. "We think
that their ability to think will be better, but that's not been
proven," Eichhorn added. The new study also reports that
initial hospitalization costs for off-pump patients were $2,272 lower
than for pump patients. The average costs for pump and off-pump
patients were $21,068 and $18,796, respectively. Other
cardiologists caution the ultimate worth of the off-pump procedure
still needs to be confirmed. In an editorial accompanying the study,
two Duke University doctors suggest that researchers need to launch a
large, extensive study on the subject. Among other things, the doctors
said researchers could examine whether the benefits of off-pump
operations are actually greater, as suspected, in older patients and
those with kidney problems or cardiovascular disease.
Last winter, a study in the New England Journal of Medicine reported
patients actually did worse after having off-pump surgeries. A critic,
however, pointed out the doctors in the study lacked experience with
the procedure. |