Matteo Pozzi
University of Pavia
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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2009
Pasquale Totaro; Simone Carlini; Matteo Pozzi; Francesco Pagani; Giuseppe Zattera; Andrea Maria D'Armini; Mario Viganò
BACKGROUNDnA minimally invasive approach through an upper ministernotomy (UMS) has been used in our Division since 1997. On the basis of favorable outcome we have gradually extended this approach from isolated aortic valve replacement (AVR) to more complex cardiac surgery procedures and it is currently our first choice for a variety of procedures. Here we report our 11 years experience.nnnMETHODSnFrom 1997 to December 2007, 1,126 procedures were performed at our department, using UMS. Isolated procedures on the aortic valve were performed in 695 patients (61%). Isolated procedures on the aortic valve as redo operation were performed in 77 patients (7%). Complex cardiac surgery procedures (including double valve replacement-repair, ascending aorta-aortic arch replacement, aortic root replacement, aortic dissection, AVR combined with coronary surgery, and complex redo procedures) were performed in 354 patients (32%). Early postoperative outcome was evaluated considering three different groups according to the surgical procedure (first time AVR, redo AVR, and complex procedure).nnnRESULTSnOverall conversion to full sternotomy was required in 16 patients (1.4%) with no significant differences between isolated AVR (9 patients, 1.3%) and complex or redo procedures (1 patient [1.2%] and 6 patients [1.6%], respectively). Forty-seven patients died in hospital (cumulative in-hospital mortality of 4.1 %). Mortality according to the procedure was 6.7, 3.8, and 2.8% for complex, redo AVR, or isolated AVR procedures, respectively, with a significant difference only for the complex procedures. Similarly, early postoperative outcome in terms of incidence of prolonged mechanical ventilation and ICU stay was significantly different only in the complex procedure group. Incidence of surgical revision (5.1, 2.9, and 2.7% for complex, redo, or isolated AVR procedures, respectively) showed no statistically significant differences regardless the type of procedures.nnnCONCLUSIONSnOur experience clearly shows that a minimally invasive approach through upper ministernotomy is feasible and safe not only for isolated AVR but that it can also be utilized for a variety of complex surgical procedures. Minimizing surgical access may be helpful in patients undergoing complex surgical procedures, especially redo procedures, without compromising the surgical result.
The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2007
Andrea M. D’Armini; Giorgio Zanotti; Stefano Ghio; Giulia Magrini; Matteo Pozzi; Laura Scelsi; Giulia Meloni; Catherine Klersy; Mario Viganò
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2010
Fabrizio Gazzoli; Giuseppe Zattera; Matteo Pozzi; Mario Viganò
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2010
Matteo Pozzi; Marco Aiello; Carlo Pellegrini; Claudio Goggi; Andrea Maria D'Armini; Mario Viganò
Archive | 2009
Pasquale Totaro; Alessia Alloni; Barbara Cattadori; Cristian Monterosso; Matteo Pozzi; Marco Aiello; Andrea Maria D'Armini
Archive | 2009
Giuseppe Zattera; Matteo Pozzi; Barbara Cattadori; Ezio Bramucci; Gaetano M. De Ferrari; Andrea Maria D'Armini; Mario Viganò
Archive | 2006
Andrea Maria D'Armini; Giorgio Zanotti; Matteo Pozzi; Salvatore Nicolardi; Corrado Tramontin; Marco Morsolini; Mario Viganò
Archive | 2006
Giulia Magrini; Stefano Ghio; Andrea Maria D'Armini; Giuseppe Zanotti; Laura Scelsi; Matteo Pozzi; Catherine Klersy; Carlo Campana; Mario Viganò; Luigi Tavazzi
Archive | 2006
Roberto Dore; D. M. Savulescu; Adele Valentini; Arturo Raisaro; C. Ranieri; L. Monti; Matteo Pozzi; Giorgio Zanotti; Andrea Maria D'Armini
Archive | 2006
Andrea Maria D'Armini; Giorgio Zanotti; Matteo Pozzi; Salvatore Nicolardi; Marco Morsolini; Mario Viganò