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Original article

Minimally invasive mini-thoracotomy access as a surgical method in state-of-the-art treatment of single-vessel coronary heart disease

Authors
  • Edin Kabil orcid logo (University Clinical Center of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinic for Cardiovascular Surgery, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Nermir Granov (University Clinical Center of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinic for Cardiovascular Surgery, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Ilirijana Haxibeqiri-Karabdić (University Clinical Center of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinic for Cardiovascular Surgery, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Sanja Grabovica (University Clinical Center of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinic for Cardiovascular Surgery, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Ermina Mujičić (Sarajevo Medical School, Sarajevo, Sarajevo School of Science and Technology, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Slavenka Štraus (University Clinical Center of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinic for Cardiovascular Surgery, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Bedrudin Banjanović (University Clinical Center of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinic for Cardiovascular Surgery, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Muhamed Djedović (University Clinical Center of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Clinic for Cardiovascular Surgery, Bosnia and Herzegovina)

Abstract

Aim: To compare outcomes of two different surgical techniques of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) for treating isolated left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery disease by full median sternotomy technique vs. minimally invasive approach via left anterior mini-thoracotomy.

Methods: This retrospective, observational study, which included 61 elective patients, was conducted at the Clinic for Cardiovascular Surgery of the Clinical Centre of the University of Sarajevo in the period from June 2019 to January 2022. Patients were divided in two groups according to the operative technique used, the sternotomy CABG group of 30 patients where the access considered full median sternotomy, and the minimally invasive CABG group where left anterior mini-thoracotomy was performed. The groups were compared by previously defined primary and secondary clinical postoperative outcomes.

Results: Out of 61 patients, the majority was males, 50 (82%). The analysis of the outcomes of the minimally invasive CABG surgery showed significantly shorter operative times (p=0.001), less postoperative drainage (p=0.001) and transfusion requirements, shorter mechanical ventilation duration (p=0.0001), low major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events rates, as well as shorter Intensive Care Unit stay days with mean of 3.3±1.442 days (p=0.025), but no total hospital stay days with mean of 6.7±1.832 days (p=0.075) compared to sternotomy CABG group.

Conclusion: Minimally invasive approach for CABG surgery in treating isolated single vessel LAD disease, together with the fasttrack protocol, offers a reasonable alternative to full median sternotomy, leading to faster patients’ overall recovery and improving the quality of life.

Keywords: anaesthesia, revascularization, cardiac surgery

How to Cite:

Kabil, E., Granov, N., Haxibeqiri-Karabdić, I., Grabovica, S., Mujičić, E., Štraus, S., Banjanović, B. & Djedović, M., (2022) “Minimally invasive mini-thoracotomy access as a surgical method in state-of-the-art treatment of single-vessel coronary heart disease”, Medicinski glasnik 20(1), 38-44. doi: https://doi.org/10.17392/1506-22

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Published on
2022-08-27

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CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0