Marco Turina
University of Zurich
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American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1998
Branko M. Weiss; Ludwig K. von Segesser; Eli Alon; Burkhardt Seifert; Marco Turina
The outcomes of cardiovascular operations during pregnancy, at delivery, and post partum were reviewed from published material in the period 1984-1996. Surgery during pregnancy resulted in fetal-neonatal morbidity and mortality of 9% and 30%, respectively, and in maternal morbidity and mortality of 24% and 6%, respectively. Duration of pregnancy at surgery and duration and temperature of cardiopulmonary bypass did not influence fetal-neonatal outcome. Maternal complications and mortality of surgery immediately after delivery were 29% and 12%, respectively, and for surgery performed with a postpartum interval the respective rates were 38% and 14%. Hospitalization after week 27 of gestation and extreme emergency contributed significantly to poor maternal outcome. Maternal deaths were reported in 9% of valvular procedures and in 22% of aortic or arterial dissection repairs and pulmonary embolectomies. Fetal-neonatal risks of maternal surgery during pregnancy are high and unpredictable. Maternal risks of cardiovascular procedures during pregnancy are moderate, significantly increase if an operation is performed at or after delivery, and, overall, should be considered as higher than those in nonpregnant cardiovascular surgical patients.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1983
Otto M. Hess; Jakob Schneider; Marco Turina; John D. Carroll; Martin Rothlin; Hans P. Krayenbuehl
Myocardial histologic features and left ventricular dynamics were assessed in 24 patients with severe aortic stenosis, 12 with (group 1) and 12 without (group 2) associated asymmetric septal hypertrophy. In 10 patients from group 1, echocardiography showed a septal/pos-terior wall ratio of 1.5; in the other 2, asymmetric septal hypertrophy was diagnosed by direct inspection at the time of surgery. Septal myectomy in all 12 patients in group 1 was completed at the time of aortic valve replacement. Septal histologic features were assessed from surgical specimens in 10 patients in group 1. Transseptal endomyocardial biopsy specimens of the anterolateral wall taken during preoperative cardiac catheterization were evaluated by light microscopy in 10 patients from group 1 and all patients of group 2. Left ventricular end-diastolic and peak systolic pressure, peak pressure gradient, calculated valve area and angiographic muscle mass did not differ significantly in groups 1 and 2; ejection fraction (68 versus 58%; probability [p] Asymmetric septal hypertrophy in patients with aortic stenosis is an adaptive mechanism to the long-standing pressure overload, and hence there is no evidence of coexistence of idiopathic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and aortic valve disease. Although the degree of valve obstruction was similar in both groups, left ventricular ejection performance was significantly lower in the group without asymmetric hypertrophy, probably because these patients had a more advanced stage of myocardial disease. After successful valve replacement, there is a significant regression of septal hypertrophy in patients with aortic stenosis and asymmetric septal hypertrophy.
Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 1996
Branko M. Weiss; Ludwig K. von Segesser; Marco Turina; Burkhardt Seifert; Thomas Pasch
OBJECTIVE To compare two heparin managements for a cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) procedure with heparin-coated equipment. The hypothesis was that a lower heparin dose may reduce blood loss and homologous transfusion requirements and influence the speed of postoperative recovery. DESIGN Prospective, randomized, and open study. SETTING Operating room and intensive care unit in a university hospital. PARTICIPANTS Twenty-four patients undergoing first-time elective coronary artery surgery. INTERVENTIONS Heparin-coated CPB equipment (Duraflo II; Baxter-Bentley) was used in all patients. The study group (n = 12) received low-dose (100 IU/kg i.v. and 0 to 1,000 IU/L priming; target level of activated coagulation time [ACT] over 180 seconds during CPB; suction in a red cell washing device); and the control group (n = 12) received high-dose (300 IU/kg i.v. and 5,000 IU/L priming; ACT over 480 seconds; standard cardiotomy suction) heparin management. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS ACT remained above 200 seconds after the initial heparin dose in the study group for the CPB duration up to 99 minutes. In 11 of 12 patients in the control group, additional heparin was required during CPB. Total doses of heparin and protamine (mean 8,017 v 50,508 IU and 83 v 325 mg, respectively; p < 0.0001), volume of homologous blood transfusion (median 600 v 1450 mL; p < 0.025), and blood products exposure (median 0.5 v 5.0 units/patients; p < 0.05) were significantly lower in the study group. Postoperative chest drainage showed a trend to lower volume loss (median 705 v 930 mL; p < 0.08) in patients managed with low-dose heparin. Oxygenator resistance during CPB, perioperative laboratory analyses (oxygen and metabolic data, hematocrit, platelet count, prothrombin, thrombin, activated partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, D-dimers, creatine kinase, and myocardial band of creatine kinase concentration), fluid balance, and the time periods required for extubation, stay in the intensive care unit, and hospital discharge were not different between the groups. There were no evidences of myocardial infarction in any of 24 patients, and all recovered after the procedure. CONCLUSION Low-dose heparin management enabled uneventful procedures with heparin-coated CPB equipment, significantly decreased protamine and homologous blood requirements, but did not reduce chest drainage or influence the postoperative course and recovery in patients after coronary artery surgery.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1992
Peter Eichhorn; Manfred Ritter; Gabor Suetsch; Ludwig K. von Segesser; Marco Turina; Rolf Jenni
OBJECTIVES AND BACKGROUND Severe primary tricuspid regurgitation in the adult is a rare finding. This study describes the diagnostic findings and the treatment of an isolated congenital cleft of the anterior leaflet of the tricuspid valve as the morphologic substrate for severe tricuspid regurgitation. METHODS The clinical, echocardiographic findings and the follow-up findings of five patients (all male, 20 to 56 years old) with this disorder are described. Four of the five patients underwent cardiac surgery that confirmed the diagnosis. RESULTS In three of five patients, exertional fatigue was the limiting symptom (New York Heart Association functional classes II and III). The clinical findings included a holosystolic murmur and supraventricular arrhythmias in all patients. Cardiac catheterization, performed in four patients, yielded the incorrect diagnosis of Ebsteins anomaly in three. In one patient the cleft was associated with an atrial septal defect of the secundum type. In four of five patients successful reconstruction of the tricuspid valve with a DeVega annuloplasty was performed. One patient had a partial excision of the right atrium, and one had a closure of a coexisting atrial septal defect. One patient refused operation. CONCLUSIONS Tricuspid valve anomalies can be accurately identified by Doppler echocardiography. Surgical repair is the treatment of choice in patients with severe tricuspid regurgitation due to a congenital cleft of the anterior leaflet of the tricuspid valve.
Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 1994
Branko M. Weiss; Ludwig K. von Segesser; Marco Turina; Wilhelm Vetter; Burkhardt Seifert; Thomas Pasch
The need for improvements in materials and equipment for extracorporeal circulation has been obvious for years. Among the surfaces with biologically active compounds, those with heparin binding have been found sufficiently thromboresistant and particularly suitable for different types of artificial perfusion. Partial left heart bypass (LHBP) was performed in 10 anesthetized, acutely instrumented, and open-chested mongrel dogs (weight 23 to 50 kg) with a servo-controlled roller pump. The pump flow was maintained at 50 mL/kg/min for 6 hours. Heparin surface-coated equipment was used without additional heparin. For LHBP with a standard circuit, the total amount of heparin during the study period was (mean +/- SD) 487 +/- 124 IU/kg. The right atrial, pulmonary artery, and left ventricular end-diastolic pressures, cardiac output, left ventricular output, right and left ventricular stroke work, pulmonary gas exchange, and acid-base balance changed similarly with both systems. Blood loss (204 +/- 78 v 1,240 +/- 586 mL, P < 0.0005), volume substitution requirements (647 +/- 48 v 1,860 +/- 764 mL, P < 0.0025), and oxygen extraction ratio (mean 25.4 to 32.0 v 25.4 to 56.4%, P < 0.025) were significantly lower, and mean aortic pressure (mean 65 to 69 v 62 to 38 mmHg, P < 0.025) and hemoglobin concentration (mean 9.1 to 8.1 v 9.4 to 3.9 g/dL, P < 0.05) were significantly higher during 6 hours of LHBP without systemic heparinization. Low but stable oxygen delivery was provided with heparin-coated LHBP, whereas it showed a descending trend (mean 14.0 to 10.8 v 13.4 to 5.5 mL/kg/min, P < 0.1) with the standard circuit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Scandinavian Cardiovascular Journal | 1997
Tengis Tkebuchava; Ludwig K. von Segesser; Mario Lachat; Michele Genoni; Urs Bauersfeld; Marco Turina
A 19-day-old boy with Ivemark syndrome (splenic agenesis associated with complex cardiac malformations and visceral abnormality) underwent palliative surgery including Glenn and hemi-Fontan procedures. Five months later the child is alive and well. We believe that early palliative surgery is worthwhile in Ivemark syndrome with a single ventricle.
American Heart Journal | 1992
Andre Linka; Manfred Ritter; Marco Turina; Rolf Jenni
Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 2001
Nicole Koelble; Branko M. Weiss; J. Wisser; Rolf Jenni; Juraj Turina; Albert Huch; Marco Turina
Japanese Heart Journal | 1997
Tengis Tkebuchava; Ludwig K. von Segesser; Augusto Gallino; Olaf Dirsgh; Marco Turina
American Journal of Cardiology | 1982
Otto M. Hess; Jakob Schneider; Marco Turina; Klaus Dieth; Hans P. Krayenbuehl