Hakkı Akalin
Ankara University
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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2001
Ugursay Kiziltepe; Adnan Uysalel; Tümer Çorapçıoğlu; Klara Dalva; Hamdi Akan; Hakkı Akalin
BACKGROUND Modified ultrafiltration (MUF) improves hemodynamics and postoperative recovery in children. Ultrafiltration (UF) may have similar benefits in adults. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of UF in adult patients. METHODS A total of 40 adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery were randomized into a study group of conventional UF during bypass + venovenous MUF after bypass and a control group with no UF. Perioperative clinical variables, cytokines, and endothelin-1 levels were compared between groups. RESULTS There was no mortality in either group. The patients in the study group had a greater rise in hematocrit (5.7% +/- 2.4% vs 1.2% +/- 1.9%, p < 0.001), hemoglobin (1.7 +/- 0.8 mg/mL vs 0.5 +/- 0.6 mg/mL, p < 0.0005), and platelet levels (27,800 +/- 29,200 vs -9,000 +/- 30,970, p < 0.001). Mean arterial blood pressure and CI increased after MUF (from 64.2 +/- 16.9 mm Hg to 72.3 +/- 14.1 mm Hg, p = 0.05, and from 2.4 +/- 0.7 to 2.8 +/- 0.6, p < 0.03, respectively). Postoperative oxygenation was better in the study group (alveolo-arterial PO2 tension gradient 74.6 +/- 43.9 mm Hg vs 107.2 +/- 27.8 mm Hg, p = 0.03). Ultrafiltration reduced postoperative bleeding (522.2 +/- 233.4 mL vs 740 +/- 198.4 mL, p < 0.003). CONCLUSIONS A combination of conventional and modified UF is effective and safe in adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Ultrafiltration improved hemodynamics, hemostatic, and pulmonary functions. We recommend the use of combined UF in high-risk adult patients.
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2003
Mustafa Sirlak; Sadık Eryilmaz; Levent Yazicioglu; Ugursay Kiziltepe; Zeynep Eyileten; Mustafa Serkan Durdu; Refik Tasoz; Neyyir Tuncay Eren; Atilla Aral; Bülent Kaya; Hakkı Akalin
OBJECTIVE The effects of microfibrillar collagen hemostat (Colgel) and oxidized cellulose (Surgicel) on bleeding and allogeneic transfusions were compared in cardiac operations with a predicted high risk of bleeding. METHODS Between August 1999 and November 2001, 71 patients undergoing elective, high risk of bleeding operations were studied after giving informed consent. The procedures included repeat cardiac operations (aorta-coronary bypass operations or valvular operations), ascending aortic aneurysm repair necessitating deep hypothermic circulatory arrest, and ascending aortic grafting without deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. Subjects were excluded if they had recent (<5 days) acetylsalicylic acid ingestion, thrombolytic therapy, or anticoagulant therapy (heparin <4 hours preoperatively or warfarin <3 days preoperatively). Consenting subjects were randomized to receive either Colgel or Surgicel. RESULTS Chest tube drainage in the first 24 hours was 373 +/- 143 mL in the Colgel group and 571 +/- 144 mL in the Surgicel group (P =.01). Total postoperative chest tube drainage was 423 +/- 154 mL (range, 280-1100 mL) in the Colgel group and 677 +/- 128 mL (range, 285-1350 mL) in the Surgicel group (P =.01). In addition, chest tube drainage was compared between the 2 groups every 3 hours after operation. Blood loss in the first 3 postoperative hours was significantly less in the Colgel group (132 +/- 41 vs 228 +/- 57 mL, P <.001). In the following 3-hour interval, this significant difference persisted (67 +/- 24 vs 121 +/- 49 mL, P <.001). CONCLUSIONS In conclusion, the easy application, low cost, and significant blood-loss reduction effect of microfibrillar collagen powder renders this agent attractive for cardiac operations associated with high risk of bleeding.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2003
Sadık Eryilmaz; Mustafa Bahadir Inan; Neyyir Tuncay Eren; Levent Yazicioglu; Tümer Çorapçıoğlu; Hakkı Akalin
BACKGROUND The aim of this study is to review our experience in coronary artery endarterectomy performed without cardiopulmonary bypass. METHODS Between May 1998 and June 2000 off-pump coronary endarterectomy was performed on 11 patients who had unstable angina pectoris. The mean ejection fraction (EF) was 26.3 +/- 4.4, and all of the patients were New York Heart Association (NYHA) III or IV. Off-pump open left anterior descending (LAD) endarterectomy was performed on 7 patients, and closed endarterectomy of the right coronary artery (RCA) was done on the remaining 4. RESULTS There were no deaths. None of the procedures was converted to on-pump operation; all the endarterectomies and bypasses were performed on the beating heart. All patients were completely revascularized, the left internal mammary artery was bypassed to the LAD in all operations, and all other grafts were of saphenous vein. At the end of the first year all bypasses to the endarterectomized arteries were patent. The overall patency rate was 95.6%. The mean postoperative EF was 34.7 +/- 9.1, which was significantly higher than the preoperative one (p < 0.05). At the end of the first year 9 patients were NYHA I or II and all were angina free in Canadian Cardiovascular Society class 0 or I. CONCLUSIONS Endarterectomy without cardiopulmonary bypass can be performed in patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction who are expected to benefit from the complete revascularization.
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2002
Levent Yazicioglu; Sadık Eryilmaz; Mustafa Sirlak; Mustafa Bahadir Inan; Atilla Aral; Refik Tasoz; Hakkı Akalin
PURPOSE The most frequent arrhythmia after coronary artery bypass surgery is atrial fibrillation (AF). The prevention and treatment of this type of arrhythmia is subobtimal. Digitalis, beta-blockers, diltiazem and amiodarone are the preferred drugs for the treatment. This study was designed to compare the effects of preoperatively started digitalis and atenolol in combination and separately, on the incidence of AF that occurs within 7 days following the operation. MATERIALS AND METHOD One-hundred and sixty patients who had similar demographic properties were randomly grouped as group I, that preoperatively received combined drug therapy (n=40), group II preoperatively used digitalis (n=40), group III atenolol (n=40), and group IV was the control group (n=40). RESULTS Postoperative AF incidence was 25, 15,4, and 17,9% in groups IV, III, and II, respectively, whereas it was 5% in group I which was lower than all other groups, but the difference was only significant between groups I and IV (P=0.012). CONCLUSION The combined use of atenolol and digitalis preoperatively was considered as an efficient treatment for lowering the incidence of AF following coronary artery bypass surgery.
International Journal of Cardiology | 2003
Ugursay Kiziltepe; Zeynep Eyileten; Mustafa Sirlak; Refik Tasoz; Atilla Aral; Neyyir Tuncay Eren; Adnan Uysalel; Hakkı Akalin
BACKGROUND Arrhythmias following cardiac surgery is still a difficult complication to treat. Magnesium sulfate is an effective antiarrhythmic agent with negligible side effects. In this study, effects of magnesium sulfate as a first line antiarrhythmic agent was compared with results of two different well-accepted antiarrhythmic agents. METHODS One hundred patients with arrhythmia were prospectively randomized to a study and a control group. Lidocaine and amiodarone were accepted as standard antiarrhythmic agents. Patients in study group were received magnesium sulfate routinely as a first line antiarrhythmic agent. Unresponsive arrhythmias were treated with standard antiarrhythmic agents. Control group patients received only standard antiarrhythmics. RESULTS Magnesium sulfate alone was effective in 56% of the study group whereas 74% of the control group were responsive to standard antiarrhythmics (P=n.s.). In study group, a subgroup analysis according to blood levels of Mg2+ revealed that magnesium sulfate was more effective in patients with low Mg2+ levels (63% for low Mg2+ levels, 55% for normal Mg2+ levels, 36% for high Mg2+ levels) and ventricular arrhythmias (60% for ventricular and 40% for supraventricular arrhythmias), without statistical significance. CONCLUSIONS Magnesium sulfate is an effective and safe antiarrhythmic agent for arrhythmias developed after open-heart surgery. Its antiarrhythmic effect may relate to its pharmacological properties and unrelated to normalization of the circulating magnesium concentrations. We recommend its use as a first line antiarrhythmic agent without routine measurement of blood levels.
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 1998
Adnan Uysalel; Levent Yazicioglu; Atilla Aral; Hakkı Akalin
Cardiac hydatid cyst is an uncommon lesion, mostly caused by Echinococcus granulosus. Occurrence of the disease in man appears to be limited geographically to areas where close and continuous contact exists between domesticated carnivores such as dogs and ungulates such as cattle and sheep. Generally cardiac hydatid cysts are univesicular. Here we report our clinical and surgical experience of treatment in a case of a multivesicular cardiac hydatid cyst with hepatic involvement.
Cardiovascular Pathology | 2003
Mustafa Şirlak; Ozge Uymaz; Refik Tasoz; Esra Erden; Ümit Özyurda; Hakkı Akalin
We report herein a case of a 61-year-old woman who was found to have a mass adjacent to the left atrium. The tumor was resected giving least damage to the left atrium on cardiopulmonary bypass with a subsequent histological diagnosis of a schwannoma. Neurogenic tumors comprise 10% to 34% of mediastinal tumors. Nerve sheath tumors are more common in adults than in children, and these are equally malignant in children and adults. Nerve sheath tumors of the heart are extremely rare. Although there are many malignant cardiac neurilemomas reported, only a few cases of benign schwannomas have been reported. We describe a rare primary benign schwannoma of the left atrium.
Cardiovascular Pathology | 2001
Sadık Eryilmaz; Mustafa Şirlak; Mustafa Bahadir Inan; Esra Erden; Neyyir Tuncay Eren; Tümer Çorapçıoğlu; Hakkı Akalin
Pericardial mesothelioma is a rare cancer for which treatment options are limited. Operative intervention in pericardial mesothelioma is primarily for effusion control, for cytoreduction before multimodal therapy, or to deliver and monitor innovative intrapericardial therapies. Misdiagnosis is common. Early detection of the disease is the only hope for survival. Echocardiography, pathologic examination of pericardial fluid and pericardial biopsy, Gallium-67 scintigraph, Ber-EP4 antibody, and immunohistochemical procedures can be used. Magnetic resonance imaging is emerging as the best modality for demonstrating the nature and extent of the constrictive process, and the infiltration to the cardiac wall and great vessels. Failure of surgical techniques is usually associated with mesothelioma with entrapped heart, a large solid tumor mass, and a long history of pericardial effusion. If the tumor is localized, resection is the only hope for this rare, but lethal, entity. No single treatment modality is efficient by itself. The exact role of intracavitary chemotherapy or irradiation remains to be defined. Preliminary clinical application of photodynamic therapy and attempts at inhibiting the effects of growth factors, such as vascular endothelial growth factor and platelet-derived growth factor, and vaccine treatments are being explored. Adenoviral molecular chemotherapy recently completed phase I testing. Clinical trials for pleural mesothelioma remain important as clinicians seek to improve the outcome for patients with pericardial mesothelioma. Early diagnosis and multidisciplinary patient care is essential for improved surgical outcome. In the future, combined therapeutic strategies involving radical surgery, radiotherapy, adjuvant chemotherapy, and immunomodulation may have a role in the treatment of pericardial mesotheliomas.
International Journal of Cardiology | 2003
Mustafa Şirlak; Sadık Eryilmaz; Levent Yazicioglu; Ugursay Kiziltepe; Mustafa Bahadir Inan; Refik Tasoz; Atilla Aral; Hakkı Akalin
BACKGROUND Conduction disturbances are very common after coronary artery bypass grafting (18-45%). Long cross-clamp time, method of cardioplegia, depth of hypothermia, and patient age are some of the risk factors. We planned this study to ascertain the effect of crystalloid or tepid blood cardioplegia (CP) on conduction disturbances. METHODS One hundred patients were randomly divided into two groups. The first group received tepid blood CP and the second received cold crystalloid CP. St. Thomas II CP was used as CCP and the same CP was mixed with blood with a ratio of 4:1 in the tepid CP group. In both groups as an initial bolus, a 10 to 15 ml/kg CP was infused with a pressure of 75 mmHg. Additionally, 400 ml of CP were given every 20 min during the cross clamping period in addition to infusion of 50-100 ml of CP after each distal anastomosis. Blood samples for CK, CK-MB, LDH and Troponin T measurements were obtained at induction, before bypass, after cross clamping, before de-clamping, after de-clamping and after bypass. Postoperative ECGs were analyzed by a cardiologist. RESULTS There were no deaths in both groups but the mean hospitalization was 8.4 +/- 1.7 days in group I, and 14.4 +/- 3.1 days in group II (P=0.004). Although there were significant rises in CK, CK-MB, LDH and Troponin T levels in both groups after CPB or de-clamping, the difference in increment between the two groups was not significant. Twelve patients in group II (24%) developed new fascicular blocks, four of these caused hemodynamic instability and needed inotropic treatment but only one was discharged with LAHB. Four patients in group I (8%) also developed new conduction disturbances within the first hour, but all completely resolved. Incidence of conduction disturbances was significantly increased in the crystalloid CP group (P=0.019). CONCLUSION There were no significant differences in cardiac enzyme measurements between cold crystalloid and tepid blood CP, but crystalloid CP caused more fascicular blocks. We conclude that myocardial protection was equal in both cardioplegia methods whereas conduction disturbances have been assumed to be caused by cold injury to the conduction tissues.
International Journal of Cardiology | 2002
Ugursay Kiziltepe; Zeynep Eyileten; Adnan Uysalel; Hakkı Akalin
Prolonged pleural effusions following a Fontan operation are a difficult problem. Although fenestrations and embolizations of systemic-pulmonary artery collaterals were suggested to treat and to decrease the risk of this complication, talc slurry pleurodesis may successfully augment and accelerate the beneficial effects of those techniques against the resistant effusions.