Table 1: Preoperative patient characteristics (n=7)
Table 2: Surgical indications (n=7)
Preoperative aorto-iliac-femoral-axis evaluation was routinely performed in all patients either during coronary catheterization or by magnetic resonance angiography. Classic open femoral vascular exposure or total percutaneous peripheral cannulation was performed with the use of vascular closure devices according to surgical preference (Figure 2a). Lymphatic regions in the groin were avoided to minimize devastating postoperative lympho-infective wound complications. Peripheral cardiopulmonary bypass was established by trans-esophageal echocardiography (TEE) guided cannulation of the right internal jugular vein (16-18Fr, OptiSite, Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, California, USA), right femoral vein (22-25 Fr, Quickdraw, Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, California, USA) and right femoral artery cannulation (21Fr or 23Fr, EndoReturn, Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, California, USA).
An endo-aortic balloon (IntraClude, Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, California, USA) was utilized for aortic occlusion and delivery of cold antegrade crystalloid cardioplegia. Routine atrioventricular valve surgery was performed with long shafted instruments (Table 3).
Table 3: Procedures applied, cardiopulmonary bypass and ischemic times (n=7)
Endoscopic transatrial left ventricular outflow tract resection was performed by detaching the anterior mitral valve (MV)-leaflet segments A1-A2-A3 from the MV-annulus with subsequent myomectomy from the aortic valve to the papillary muscle base. The anterior MV-leaflet was reattached to the annulus with the incorporation of an oversized bovine pericardial patch.
Tricuspid valve (TV) surgery was performed by bicaval snaring, argon-gas surgical cryoablation (Medtronic Inc, Minneapolis, USA) and left atrial appendage closure for chronic atrial fibrillation and closure of patent foramen ovale were routinely performed.
Post-procedural TEE guided de-airing was ensured by left atrial and aortic balloon venting catheters and continuous flooding of the operative field with carbon dioxide. Temporary ventricular pacing wires were placed on the ventricular aspect.
Cardiorespiratory support, pulmonary hypertension protocols, sedation, analgesia, glycemic control, wound reviews (Figure 2b and c) and anticoagulation stabilization were applied as indicated in intensive care and general ward.
There were no 30-day mortalities. One patient (14.3%) required revision for bleeding, which was performed through the same incision without further complications. Prolonged intensive care admission (more than six days), incision wound infection, dialysis, hospital acquired pneumonia and eventual permanent pacemaker insertion all occurred in one patient (14.3%), who sustained a perioperative stroke and subsequent mechanical valve thrombosis on day 10 postoperatively. This was treated medically and e ventual h ome d ischarge w as a chieved o n day 72. The mean length of hospitalization was 22.6±22.7 days (range 7-72 days). Analyses of a total of 276.0 patient months (100% complete, range 2.2-84.5 months, mean 39.4±88.4 months, 85.7% longer than two years) revealed no late mortalities, no reinterventions, no residual MV-regurgitation more than grade 1 following MV-repair and no paravalvular leaks post-MV-replacement. Residual TV-regurgitation more than grade 2 was present in one patient (14.3%), the mean systolic pulmonary artery pressure was 38.7±15.6 mmHg and six patients (85.7%) had residual BMI greater than 40. New York Heart Association class I or II was achieved in six patients (85.7%).
In conclusion, endoscopic port access surgery for atrioventricular valve disease in extreme obese patients can be performed safely in experienced centers with favorable perioperative and long-term procedural, clinical and echocardiographic outcomes. Extreme obesity should not be perceived as a contraindication to endoscopic approaches and not deter surgeons and referring physicians from offering these patients the full range of benefits associated with MI cardiac surgery.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the research
and/or authorship of this article.
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