MIDCAB: This procedure offers the benefits of conventional CABG but produces less traumatic injury; the recovery may be closer to that experienced by angioplasty patients. Unfortunately, this procedure is limited to a small subset of patients requiring bypass surgery who need only 1-2 bypasses.
During the operation, the surgeon makes an incision approximately 6-10 cm long on the front of the chest toward the left side. The pectoral muscles are divided and a small portion of the front of the rib, the costal cartilage, is removed. The surgeon clamps off the internal mammary artery (IMA), which lies just beneath this cartilage, and frees its lower end. An opening is made in the pericardium, the sheath covering the heart. A mechanical stabilizer is attached to the heart to reduce its movement, and the surgeon connects the mammary artery below the blockage to the left anterior descending (LAD) artery and/or one of its branches. Once the clamp on the mammary artery is released, blood can flow from the IMA through the LAD artery, bypassing the blockage and providing oxygen-rich blood to the heart muscle.
OPCAB: The use of this procedure has grown significantly because of its advantages over conventional CABG and the MIDCAB procedure. Compared with patients undergoing conventional CABG, those undergoing OPCAB require fewer blood transfusions, may have a decreased risk of stroke, have a shorter post-operative hospital stay, and may be able to return to normal activities more rapidly. During the procedure, the surgeon opens the patient's chest with a 12- to 14-inch incision over the breastbone and divides it to expose the heart. Simultaneously, the mammary artery and the greater saphenous vein from one of the patient's legs or other blood vessels are "harvested" for use in the bypass procedure. Like the MIDCAB procedure, a mechanical heart stabilizer is employed to restrict the heart movement. With this procedure, bypasses can be constructed for any blocked arteries on the heart.
MIDCAB and OPCAB surgeries both take approximately 3-4 hours.
|