On-Pump versus Off-Pump Coronary-Artery Bypass Surgery
Northport VA Medical Center · VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Coronary-artery bypass grafting (CABG) has traditionally been performed with the use of cardiopulmonary bypass (on-pump CABG). CABG without cardiopulmonary bypass (off-pump CABG) might reduce the number of complications related to the heart-lung machine.
We randomly assigned 2203 patients scheduled for urgent or elective CABG to either on-pump or off-pump procedures. The primary short-term end point was a composite of death or complications (reoperation, new mechanical support, cardiac arrest, coma, stroke, or renal failure) before discharge or within 30 days after surgery. The primary long-term end point was a composite of death from any cause, a repeat revascularization procedure, or a nonfatal myocardial infarction within 1 year after surgery. Secondary end points included the completeness of revascularization, graft patency at 1 year, neuropsychological outcomes, and the use of major resources.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 95.00
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 33
Authors
9- ALA. Laurie ShroyerCorresponding
Northport VA Medical Center, VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System
- FLFrederick L. Grover
VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System, University of Colorado Denver
- BHBrack Hattler
University of Colorado Denver, VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System
- JFJoseph F. Collins
- GOGerald O. McDonald
Office of Patient Care Services
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Cardiopulmonary bypass
- Artery
- Cardiology
- Off-pump coronary artery bypass
- Bypass grafting
- Internal medicine
- Heart-Lung Machine
- Good health and well-being