Publication: Video-assisted mitral valve reoperation through a right minithoracotomy: A single-center experience
Program
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Ezelsoy, Mehmet
Oral, Kerem
Saracoglu, Ayten
Saracoglu, Kemal Tolga
Akpinar, Belhhan
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No
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Volume Title
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Abstract
Objective: The study aim was to determine our results of minimally invasive technique without aortic cross clamping for mitral valve surgery after previous cardiac surgery. Material and Methods: We performed 24 consecutive mitral valve surgeries between January 2015 and December 2018 in patients with a history of previous cardiac surgery.The procedure was performed using video-assisted right minithoracotomy,femoro-femoral bypass, a temperature of 26 degrees C, and cardiopulmonary bypass without aortic cross-clamping. Results: Mitral valve replacement was performed in 12 (50%) of these patients, and mitral valve repair was performed in the same number (50%). The mean ejection fraction was 46.08 +/- 6.52% and the mean age was 61.52 +/- 11.48 years. Eighteen patients (75%) had previous coronary artery bypass graft surgery, and six patients (25%) had previous mitral valve surgery. In terms of postoperative complication frequencies that patients have experienced, one of the patients (4.1%) had postoperative low cardiac output syndrome. Two patients (8.3%) had renal failure; 2 patients (8.3%) had pneumonia, and stroke was seen in one patient (4.1%) postoperatively, whereas 2 patients (8.3%) had reoperation for bleeding. The mean postoperative packed red blood cell transfusion requirement at 48 hours was 1.00 +/- 1.10 units.The mean length of hospital stay was 10.54 +/- 4.37 days. Conclusion: Minimally invasive port access procedure via right thoracotomy may be a safe and effective option in selected patients who need mitral surgery and have a history of prior sternotomy.
Source
Publisher
Galenos Publ House
Subject
Surgery
Citation
Has Part
Source
Turkish journal of surgery
Book Series Title
Edition
DOI
10.47717/turkjsurg.2025.6833
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CC BY-NC (Attribution-NonCommercial)
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Creative Commons license
Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as CC BY-NC (Attribution-NonCommercial)

