Lishan Aklog
Brigham and Women's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Lishan Aklog.
Circulation | 2002
Lishan Aklog; Christopher S. Williams; John G. Byrne; Samuel Z. Goldhaber
Background— Acute pulmonary embolism confers a high mortality rate despite advances in diagnosis and therapy. Thrombolysis is often effective but has a high frequency of major bleeding complications, especially intracranial hemorrhage. Therefore, we liberalized our criteria for acute pulmonary embolectomy and considered operating on patients with anatomically extensive pulmonary embolism and concomitant moderate to severe right ventricular dysfunction despite preserved systemic arterial pressure. Methods and Results— We report 29 (17 men and 12 women) consecutive patients who underwent embolectomy from October 1999 through October 2001. Twenty-six patients (89%) survived surgery and were alive more than 1 month postoperatively. Median follow-up is 10 months. Conclusion— The high survival rate of 89% can be attributed to improved surgical technique, rapid diagnosis and triage, and careful patient selection. We hope that other tertiary centers will evaluate pulmonary embolism patients with an algorithm that...
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1994
Robert J. Rizzo; Sary F. Aranki; Lishan Aklog; Gregory S. Couper; David H. Adams; John J. Collins; Nancy M. Kinchla; Elizabeth N. Allred; Lawrence H. Cohn
Angiography has been considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of acute dissection of the ascending aorta, but it may increase mortality by imposing an unnecessary delay before surgical repair. In addition, coronary angiography has often been considered essential as well. From 1988 to 1993, 37 patients (median age 61 years, 30 men and 7 women) had acute dissection of the ascending aorta. All of the initial 15 patients (group I) had angiography, even through the diagnosis of aortic dissection had already been made noninvasively in 14; six (40%) of 15 died, three of aortic rupture and none of complications of coronary artery disease. Among the next 22 patients (group II), 21 had a noninvasive diagnosis of acute dissection of the ascending aorta (eight by echocardiography; 13 by computed tomography), and 19 (86%) were operated on without angiography; two died (9%, p = 0.03 versus group I) and neither death was due to aortic rupture or coronary artery disease. Overall, either root or selective coronary angiography was attempted in 18 of 37 patients, but it documented coronary artery disease in only two patients (11%). Coronary artery disease was found in four other patents at autopsy; three of them, including two that died of aortic rupture, had angiography that failed to reveal the coronary artery disease. Noninvasive diagnosis of acute dissection of the ascending aorta is reliable and avoids the risks and delays inherent in invasive angiography. Rapid noninvasive diagnosis of aortic dissection and avoidance of routine angiography appear to improve survival by expediting surgical intervention and thus decreasing the risk of aortic rupture.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2002
Curtis A Anderson; Farzan Filsoufi; Lishan Aklog; Robert Saeid Farivar; John G. Byrne; David H. Adams
BACKGROUND The purpose of this retrospective study was to evaluate the current incidence, survival, and predictors of mortality for open chest management at our center. METHODS Our database was analyzed to identify adult postcardiotomy patients who left the operating room without primary sternal closure. Medical records were reviewed to determine mortality, postoperative complications, and pertinent hemodynamic data. RESULTS From November 1997 to June 2000, 5,177 adults underwent cardiac procedures at our center. The incidence of open chest management was 1.7% (87 of 5,177), including 0.7% (16 of 2,254) for isolated coronary artery bypass grafting, 1.6% (15 of 912) for isolated valve, and 5.6% (47 of 839) for combined valve/coronary bypass. Hospital survival was 76% (66 of 87). Major complications included deep sternal infection (n = 4), stroke (n = 8), and dialysis (n = 13). Predictors of mortality by univariate analysis included ventricular assist device insertion (p = 0.003), new onset hemodialysis (p < 0.0005), reoperation for bleeding (p = 0.002), sternal infection (p = 0.042), mean length of delay before sternal closure (survivors = 3.2 days, nonsurvivors = 6.2 days; p = 0.031), higher mean dose of epinephrine at the time of chest closure (2.5 microg versus 0.9 microg, p = 0.011), and longer duration of high dose inotropic therapy (110 hours versus 43 hours, p = 0.002). Multivariate analysis showed ventricular assistance and reoperation for bleeding as independent predictors of in-hospital death with odds ratios of 3.8 and 3.4, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Liberal use of open chest management is useful in patients with postcardiotomy shock, and can be carried out with a relatively low incidence of sternal complications. Patients who require ventricular assistance or exploration for ongoing mediastinal bleeding continue to have a high mortality rate.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2003
Tomas Gudbjartsson; Manu Mathur; Tomislav Mihaljevic; Lishan Aklog; John G. Byrne; Lawrence H. Cohn
OBJECTIVES This study was designed to evaluate the surgical treatment of recurrent coarctation by a new technique. BACKGROUND Recurrent coarctation either from aneurysm or recurrent constriction is a difficult problem in the adult because of the possible interruption of important collateral circulation. METHODS We reviewed four patients who underwent recurrent coarctation surgery with the use of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (HCA). RESULTS All four patients survived. Deep HCA facilitated precise surgical resection and there was no postoperative paraplegia, stroke, or myocardial infarction. CONCLUSIONS Deep HCA and resection and grafting of the coarctation is indicated for complicated adult coarctations, particularly when the collateral circulation is in doubt.
Journal of Cardiac Surgery | 2008
David H. Adams; Farzan Filsoufi; John G. Byrne; Alexandros N. Karavas; Lishan Aklog
Abstract An increasing number of patients are being referred for mitral valve repair in the redo cardiac surgery setting. The most common clinical scenarios involve prior coronary bypass surgery or aortic valve replacement, each presenting special challenges in terms of gaining valve exposure to enable repair while limiting dissection as much as possible. A right anterior thoracotomy approach is preferred in most patients, coupled with hypothermic fibrillatory arrest. A repeat sternotomy may be favored in select circumstances such as when there is a need for bypass grafting or moderate aortic insufficiency is present. Special attention to cannulation techniques, perfusion conditions, valve exposure, and de‐airing maneuvers are all important to ensure good clinical results. Using a tailored approach we have performed mitral valve repair in 22 patients with a patent left internal mammary artery graft following coronary artery bypass grafting between July 1992 and February 2000 with acceptable morbidity and low mortality.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2001
John G. Byrne; Lishan Aklog; David H. Adams; Lawrence H. Cohn; Sary F. Aranki
BACKGROUND Reoperative coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) through a left thoracotomy is a challenging operation with no one dominant approach. We developed a tailored strategy for this difficult group of patients, integrating the currently available newer technologies for each patient indication. METHODS Between October 1991 and October 1999, 50 consecutive patients underwent reoperative CABG through a left thoracotomy. Age was 65 +/- 9 years, 40 (80%) were men, and preoperative ejection fraction was 40 +/- 13. In 36 patients (72%) the left internal mammary artery had been placed to the left anterior descending coronary artery during the primary CABG and in 25 of 36 patients (70%) this left internal mammary artery-left anterior descending coronary artery graft was patent. The mean duration from previous CABG was 8.0 +/- 4.8 years. Three approaches were used: (1) conventional cardiopulmonary bypass using fibrillatory or circulatory arrest (n = 33, 66%); (2) Heartport endoaortic balloon occlusion (n = 4, 8%); and (3) off-pump beating heart techniques (n = 13, 26%). RESULTS The off-pump CABG technique was used in the majority of recent patients and 1 (7.7%) had to be converted to cardiopulmonary bypass due to hemodynamic instability. When cardiopulmonary bypass was used its duration was 122 +/- 59 minutes and mean temperature on bypass was 24 degrees +/- 6 degrees C. In the 4 patients in whom the Heartport system was used, the median endoaortic occlusion duration was 49 minutes. Patients received an average of 1.4 grafts/patient. In 60 of 70 patients (89%) distal anastomoses were performed to an anterolateral coronary target. There were 3 of 50 (6%) operative deaths, 2 in the conventional group and 1 in the endoaortic balloon occlusion group. The mean length of stay in the 47 survivors was 7.8 +/- 3.9 days (median, 7 days). CONCLUSIONS Reoperative CABG by left thoracotomy remains a challenging operation. Several techniques, including off-pump CABG, conventional cardiopulmonary bypass, circulatory arrest, and endoaortic balloon occlusion, should be in the surgeons armamentarium to allow a tailored approach for each operation based on patient indications.
Current Opinion in Cardiology | 2001
Farzan Filsoufi; Lishan Aklog; David H. Adams
For more than three decades, conventional coronary artery bypass grafting (full sternotomy, cardiopulmonary bypass, and cardioplegic arrest) has been the treatment of choice for patients with multi-vessel coronary artery disease. However, neurologic injury secondary to ascending aortic manipulation and systemic inflammatory reaction related to cardiopulmonary bypass are major causes of morbidity. During the past decade research efforts have been focused on the development of innovative revascularization techniques to minimize these deleterious effects. Minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass surgery was developed to reduce chest trauma and to accelerate patient recovery. The relatively recent introduction of mechanical stabilizers and positioning devices has allowed for the safe performance of off-pump coronary artery bypass for patients with multi-vessel disease. Robotic technology has offered the possibility of myocardial revascularization through limited access using endoscopic principles. Recently, emphasis has been placed on the development of new sutureless anastomotic devices that may revolutionize the field of myocardial revascularization and allow a broader acceptance of minimally invasive CABG. Despite the increasing availability of new technologies, the validity of these procedures must be evaluated carefully. Prospective randomized studies and longitudinal follow-up will be required.
Seminars in Vascular Medicine | 2001
Lishan Aklog
Emergency surgical pulmonary embolectomy is a highly effective treatment for selected patients with pulmonary embolism. Rapid noninvasive diagnostic modalities allow proper patient selection based on anatomic location of the emboli, right heart function, and contraindications to thrombolysis. Operative results are a direct reflection of the preoperative hemodynamic status, the degree of underlying cardiopulmonary disease, and attention to minimizing surgical trauma and protecting the right heart. An operative mortality of 10% or less and excellent long-term outcomes can be expected if the procedure is performed prior to cardiovascular collapse as part of a multidisciplinary strategy which emphasizes careful patient selection, rapid diagnosis, triage, and transport.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2002
Lishan Aklog; Jerome Sepic; Farzan Filsoufi; John G. Byrne; David H. Adams
Performing a precise inferior vena caval (IVC) anastomosis during bicaval orthotopic heart transplantation can sometimes be challenging because of crowding of the operative field by the venous cannula and tourniquet. We performed bicaval orthotopic heart transplantation in 10 patients using an open IVC anastomotic technique with vacuum-assisted venous drainage. A long venous cannula was passed into the IVC through the femoral vein. The IVC anastomosis was performed after removing the IVC tourniquet under vacuum-assisted venous drainage. A precise edge-to-edge IVC anastomosis was successfully performed in all patients. This technique may result in greater anastomotic precision and improved outcomes.
Asaio Journal | 2002
Mark H.D. Danton; John G. Byrne; Michael Hsin; Rita G. Laurence; Lawrence H. Cohn; Lishan Aklog
The conductance catheter method for measuring right ventricular (RV) volume changes was assessed in seven excised porcine hearts. A 5-FG conductance catheter was placed within a latex balloon and positioned in the RV cavity of seven freshly excised porcine hearts. Conductance was recorded while saline was withdrawn from the intraventricular balloon in 2 ml decrements. Linear regression analysis of measured conductance versus reference volumes was computed. The effect of left ventricular (LV) filling and catheter length on conductance derived RV volume was also determined. Conductance derived volumes were highly correlated with reference volumes [R2 0.976, standard deviation (SD) 0.035]. The mean gradient of regression was 0.97 (SD 0.10), and it was not significantly affected by LV volume alterations. However, when we analyzed LV filling, a small but significant increase in the y-intercept was observed (LV empty 3.11 ml, SD 1.71; LV full 4.58, SD 2.39;p = 0.008). Introduction of the catheter through either the tricuspid or pulmonary orifices were both effective in ventricular volume measurement. The effect of mismatch between the catheter length and the RV long axis dimension was evaluated by changing the position of the active sensing electrodes along the catheter body. Conductance measurements, obtained from catheters shorter than the long axis of the RV, still maintained a highly linear correlation with real volume, but regression gradients were significantly reduced (long 0.975, SD 0.087; medium 0.787, SD 0.094; small 0.589, SD 0.091;p < 0.001). These results show that a conductance catheter of appropriate length can accurately measure RV volume, despite the complex shape and geometric changes associated with ventricular filling.