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Featured researches published by Robert Verhelst.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2009

Repair-oriented classification of aortic insufficiency: impact on surgical techniques and clinical outcomes.

Munir Boodhwani; Laurent de Kerchove; David Glineur; Alain Poncelet; Jean Rubay; Parla Astarci; Robert Verhelst; Philippe Noirhomme; Gebrine El Khoury

OBJECTIVE Valve repair for aortic insufficiency requires a tailored surgical approach determined by the leaflet and aortic disease. Over the past decade, we have developed a functional classification of AI, which guides repair strategy and can predict outcome. In this study, we analyze our experience with a systematic approach to aortic valve repair. METHODS From 1996 to 2007, 264 patients underwent elective aortic valve repair for aortic insufficiency (mean age - 54 +/- 16 years; 79% male). AV was tricuspid in 171 patients bicuspid in 90 and quadricuspid in 3. One hundred fifty three patients had type I dysfunction (aortic dilatation), 134 had type II (cusp prolapse), and 40 had type III (restrictive). Thirty six percent (96/264) of the patients had more than one identified mechanism. RESULTS In-hospital mortality was 1.1% (3/264). Six patients experienced early repair failure; 3 underwent re-repair. Functional classification predicted the necessary repair techniques in 82-100% of patients, with adjunctive techniques being employed in up to 35% of patients. Mid-term follow up (median [interquartile range]: 47 [29-73] months) revealed a late mortality rate of 4.2% (11/261, 10 cardiac). Five year overall survival was 95 +/- 3%. Ten patients underwent aortic valve reoperation (1 re-repair). Freedoms from recurrent Al (>2+) and from AV reoperation at 5 years was 88 +/- 3% and 92 +/- 4% respectively and patients with type I (82 +/- 9%; 93 +/- 5%) or II (95 +/- 5%; 94 +/- 6%) had better outcomes compared to type III (76 +/- 17%; 84 +/- 13%). CONCLUSION Aortic valve repair is an acceptable therapeutic option for patients with aortic insufficiency. This functional classification allows a systematic approach to the repair of Al and can help to predict the surgical techniques required as well as the durability of repair. Restrictive cusp motion (type III), due to fibrosis or calcification, is an important predictor for recurrent Al following AV repair.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Long-term clinical and angiographic follow-up of sequential internal thoracic artery grafting

R. Dion; David Glineur; David Derouck; Robert Verhelst; Philippe Noirhomme; Gebrine El Khoury; Etienne Degrave; Claude Hanet

OBJECTIVE Sequential internal thoracic artery (ITA) grafting allows a more complete arterial revascularization of the myocardium. We wanted to verify whether the excellent clinical and angiographic short term results reported by us before where maintained over 10 years and more. METHODS the first consecutive 500 patients having received at least one sequential ITA graft between October 1985 and August 1991 were reviewed. Age averaged 61 years. Fifty-three patients had a left ventricular ejection fraction less than 40%, 117 were not elective, 35 (7%) were reoperations, 56 (11%) had diabetes. In total 2156 anastomoses were constructed (4.3/patient), among them 1367 arterial anastomoses (2.7/patient) and 1150 sequential ITA anastomoses (2.3/patient). The clinical follow-up was 97.4% complete and averaged 9.6 (range 8.6-13.6) years. One hundred and sixty-one patients consented to a late angiographic restudy after a mean interval of 7.4 (range 1-12.2) years. RESULTS At 5 and 10 years, 89 and 72% of the patients were still alive. At 10 years 82% are still asymptomatic and 71% free of any type of ischaemia. Only four patients (0.8%) needed a repeat surgical revascularization, and 11 (2.3%) a percutaneous coronary angioplasty. At 5 and 10 years, 92.8 and 69% of the patients remained free of any cardiac event. Overall, 95.5% of the arterial anastomoses were patent and 96.1% of the sequential ITA were patent. There was a significant difference between the patency rate of pedicled ITA and free ITA anastomoses: 96.3 vs. 86.5% (P=0.02). There was no difference in patency between left ITA and right ITA anastomoses for the LAD and Cx areas. Sequential ITA anastomoses showed excellent patency rates to all coronary vessels but the very distal circumflex and the distal branches of right coronary artery (85%). There was no significant difference between the patency of the proximal and the distal sequential ITA anastomoses. The sequential anastomoses constructed in the length tend to remain more patent than the diamond-shaped ones: 97.2 vs. 91.5% (P=0.004). CONCLUSIONS Sequential ITA grafting optimizes arterial revascularization. The long-term patency is excellent, is identical to that of single ITA grafting, and appears not much different from postoperative patency. The need for repeat surgical and interventional revascularization has been extremely low: 3.1% over the whole follow-up.


Current Opinion in Cardiology | 2005

Functional classification of aortic root/valve abnormalities and their correlation with etiologies and surgical procedures.

Gebrine El Khoury; David Glineur; Jean Rubay; Robert Verhelst; Y d'Udekem d'Acoz; A. Poncelet; Parla Astarci; Philippe Noirhomme; Michel Van Dyck

Purpose of review Patients with aortic root pathology may benefit from ‘valve-conservation’ surgery although application of this philosophy is limited by a lack of ‘standardized’ surgical techniques. A functional classification of aortic root and valvular abnormalities has been developed in 260 patients and correlated with the etiology of the pathologic process and the surgical procedure performed. Early outcome was assessed using hospital records and medium-term follow-up by cardiological review. Recent findings From January 1995 until March 2001, 260 patients were operated on for aortic root pathology using valve-conserving surgical techniques. Hospital mortality was 2%; intra-operative echocardiography showed residual aortic regurgitation (Grade 1-2) in 11%, none in the remaining patients. Follow-up at a mean of 20 months (87% of patients) showed trivial or Grade 1 aortic regurgitation in 80%. Summary Application of a simple functional classification for aortic root pathology and aortic valve disease allows the logical application of ‘valve-conserving’ surgical procedures with excellent early and medium-term results.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 1993

Bilateral Mammary Grafting - Clinical, Functional and Angiographic Assessment in 400 Consecutive Patients

R. Dion; Robert Verhelst; Jean Rubay; Claude Hanet; Py. Etienne; Gebrine El Khoury; P. Bettendorff; W. Wyns

Between October 1985 and September 1991, 400 patients benefited from bilateral internal mammary artery (BIMA) grafting. Of these, 354 (88.5%) were male and the average age was 57.4 years. There were 132 (33%) urgent procedures, 55 in diabetic patients (14%) and 15 in end-stage renal failures (4%). An average of 3.9 distal anastomoses (AN) per patient was undertaken, 2.8 using arterial grafts. Two hundred sixty-nine patients (67.2%) received exclusively arterial grafts. Right internal mammary artery (RIMA) grafts were predominantly directed to the left coronary system (348 AN = 78%) and particularly to the circumflex (CX) area. Postoperative myocardial infarction was diagnosed in 16 patients (4%). Reoperation was required for early myocardial ischemia in 12 patients (3%) and for excessive bleeding in 23 patients (5.8%). Sternal complications occurred in 18 patients (4.1%), 5 in diabetic patients (9%) and 3 in renal patients (20%). The hospital mortality was 2% (8 patients, 3 cardiac causes). Follow-up averages 37.7 months. Late mortality was 3% (12 patients, 4 cardiac causes). Angina recurred in 12 patients (3.1%). The maximal stress test at a mean interval of 9 months was abnormal in 7.4% (21 patients). One hundred eighty-one patients (47%) consented to an angiographic restudy at an average of 13 months postoperatively. Pedicled RIMA patency rates equal those of pedicled LIMA (95.1 vs 96.7, NS) and the grafted vessel does not alter the patency rates of IMA AN. A pedicled IMA graft is preferable to a free IMA graft (96.1 vs 79.6, P < 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Circulation | 2006

Repair of Bicuspid Aortic Valves in Patients With Aortic Regurgitation

Gebrine El Khoury; Jean-Louis Vanoverschelde; David Glineur; Frédéric Pierard; Robert Verhelst; Jean Rubay; Jean-Christophe Funken; Christine Watremez; Parla Astarci; Valérie Lacroix; Alain Poncelet; Philippe Noirhomme

Background— Bicuspid aortic valve regurgitation can be caused by a defect in the valve itself or by dysfunction of one or more components of the aortic root complex. A successful repair thus requires correction of all aspects of the problem simultaneously. We review our experience addressing both the valve and the aortic root when correcting bicuspid valve regurgitation. Methods and Results— Between 1996 and 2004, we treated 68 patients for aortic regurgitation. Thirty patients had isolated aortic regurgitation, and 38 had an associated ascending aortic aneurysm. All patients were treated using a standardized and integrated surgical technique, which included resection of the median raphe or leaflet plication, subcommissural annuloplasty, reinforcement of the leaflet free edge, and sinotubular junction plication. In the 38 patients with proximal aortic dilatation, reimplantation or remodeling of the aortic root was performed. Immediate postoperative echocardiography showed grade ≤1 aortic regurgitation in all patients. Three patients nonetheless needed an early re-operation because of recurrent regurgitation. No hospital mortality was observed. At a mean follow-up of 34 months after surgery, all patients were in New York Heart Association (NYHA) class 1 or 2. Two patients needed a re-operation (23 and 92 months, respectively). Echocardiographic follow-up showed no progression of the regurgitation in 58 surviving patients. Four patients progressed to grade 2 regurgitation. Conclusion— Our data indicate that regurgitant bicuspid aortic valves, whether alone or in association with a proximal aortic dilatation, can be repaired successfully provided that both the valve and the aortic root problems are treated simultaneously.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1998

Comparison of dipyridamole stress echocardiography and perfusion scintigraphy for cardiac risk stratification in vascular surgery patients.

Agnes Pasquet; Anne-Marie D’Hondt; Robert Verhelst; Jean-Louis Vanoverschelde; Jacques Melin; Thomas H. Marwick

Dipyridamole single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) has a high negative predictive value for perioperative cardiac events, but events are infrequent in patients with a positive test. In contrast, dipyridamole echocardiography is more selective for detection of multivessel disease and thus may have a greater specificity for cardiac events. We therefore compared the ability of dipyridamole SPECT and echocardiography to predict perioperative and long-term cardiac events in 133 patients referred for vascular surgery. The group was also evaluated based on clinical features and ejection fraction. Four patients had surgery cancelled because of high risk and were excluded from further analysis. Among the 129 remaining patients, 21 had coronary revascularization (n=12) or an early cardiac end point (n=9). The sensitivity of SPECT for the prediction of early events (90%) was not significantly different from that of echocardiography (66%, p=NS). The specificity of SPECT (68%) was less than that of echocardiography (88%, p <0.001%), as was the accuracy (72% vs 84%, p=0.02). These findings were replicated after exclusion of patients with treatment end points. During long-term follow-up, 12 patients experienced > or = 1 event: 6 died from cardiac causes, 4 underwent revascularization, and 3 had myocardial infarction. Thus, the specificity of SPECT and echocardiography for late events were 58% and 80%, respectively (p <0.001). The 3-year survival of patients without ischemia during echocardiography or at SPECT was not different (93% vs 94%, p=NS).


Circulation | 2009

Effects of Preoperative Aortic Insufficiency on Outcome After Aortic Valve–Sparing Surgery

Laurent de Kerchove; Munir Boodhwani; David Glineur; Alain Poncelet; Robert Verhelst; Parla Astarci; Valérie Lacroix; Jean Rubay; Michel Vandyck; Jean-Louis Vanoverschelde; Philippe Noirhomme; Gebrine El Khoury

Background— The presence of significant preoperative aortic insufficiency (AI) or the need for cusp repair has been suggested as a risk factor for poorer outcomes after aortic valve (AV)–sparing surgery. We analyzed the influence of these factors on the mid-term outcomes of AV surgery. Methods and Results— Between 1996 and 2008, 164 consecutive patients underwent elective AV-sparing surgery. Severe preoperative AI (grade ≥3+) was present in 93 patients (57%), and 54 (33%) had a bicuspid valve. Root repair was performed with either the reimplantation (74%) or the remodeling (26%) technique, and cusp repair was performed in 90 patients (55%). Mean clinical follow-up was 57 months. Hospital mortality was 0.6%. Cusp repair was required in 52% of the patients with preoperative AI ≤2+ and in 57% of those with AI ≥3+ (P=0.6). Cusp repair was required more frequently in bicuspid versus tricuspid valves (91% versus 38%, P<0.001). Overall survival at 8 years was 88±8%. Freedom from AV reoperation at 8 years was similar with preoperative AI ≤2+ versus preoperative AI ≥3+ (89±11% versus 90±7%, P=0.7) and with versus without cusp repair (84±17% versus 92±8%, P=0.5). Freedom from recurrent AI (grade ≥3+) at 5 years was also similar between groups (90±10% versus 89±8%, P=0.9, and 90±8% versus 89±9%, P=0.8, respectively). By multivariate analyses, predictors of recurrent AI ≥2+ were preoperative left ventricle end-diastolic diameter and AI >1+ on discharge echocardiography. Conclusions— With a systematic approach to cusp assessment and repair, AV-sparing surgery for root pathology has an acceptable mid-term outcome, irrespective of preoperative AI or need for cusp repair.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

Sensitivity, specificity, and surgical impact of somatosensory evoked potentials in descending aorta surgery.

Jean-Michel Guerit; Catherine Witdoeckt; Robert Verhelst; Amin Matta; Luc Jacquet; R. Dion

BACKGROUND We evaluate the efficiency of multilevel somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) monitoring for intraoperative re-establishment of blood flow to the spinal cord in 63 patients undergoing descending aorta repair. METHODS The presence of critical vessels in a cross-clamped aortic segment was ascertained by a 15 minute SEP observation period while the segment between the clamps was vented to drain out the collateral flow. RESULTS SEPs influenced the surgical strategy in 17 cases (27%): use of the Biomedicus in 1 traumatic rupture; critical vessel reimplantation or distal clamp replacement in 13 cases of segmental spinal ischemia; and hastening the procedure or proximal clamp replacement in 3 cases of left carotid ischemia. There were no cases of unexplained multilevel SEP abnormalities. Immediate paraplegia was observed in 2 cases (1 pre-existing; 1 forecast by a 199-minute period of SEP absence due to segmental ischemia); 2 patients presented delayed paraplegias despite unchanged intraoperative SEPs, and 1 case presented a transient paraplegia due to lower motoneuronal involvement. CONCLUSIONS SEPs efficiently identified critical vessels to be reimplanted in order to avoid immediate paraplegia. However, systematic additional vessel reimplantation, if technically feasible, and prolongation of SEP monitoring during the postoperative period with careful blood pressure control are needed to prevent delayed paraplegia.


Circulation | 2008

The Athlete's Heart - Gender Aspects

David Glineur; Claude Hanet; Alain Poncelet; William D'Hoore; Jean-Christophe Funken; Jean Rubay; Joelle Kefer; Parla Astarci; Valérie Lacroix; Robert Verhelst; Pierre Yves Etienne; Philippe Noirhomme; Gebrine El Khoury

Background— Bilateral internal thoracic arteries (BITA) demonstrated superiority over other grafts to the left coronary system in terms of patency and survival benefit. Several BITA configurations are proposed for left-sided myocardial revascularization, but the ideal BITA assemblage is still unidentified. Methods and Results— From 03/2003 to 08/2006, 1297 consecutive patients underwent isolated bypass surgery in our institution. 481 patients met the inclusion criteria for randomization, and 304 (64%) were randomized. Patients were allocated to BITA in situ grafting (n=147) or Y configuration (n=152) then evaluated for clinical, functional, and angiographic outcome after 6 months and 3 years. Patient telephone interviews were conducted every 3 months and a stress test performed twice yearly under the referring cardiologist’s supervision. Angiographic follow-up was performed 6 months after surgery. The primary and secondary end points were, respectively, major adverse cerebrocardiovascular events (MACCE) and the proportion of ITA grafts that were completely occluded at follow-up angiography. More arterial anastomoses were performed in patients randomized to the Y than the in situ configuration (3.2 versus 2.4; P<0.001). No significant difference between the 2 groups in terms of hospital mortality or morbidity was found. At follow-up, there was no significant difference in any MACCE rate between the 2 groups. 450 out of 464 anastomosis (97%) in the BITA Y group and 287 of 295 (97%) in the BITA in situ group were controlled patent (P=0.99). Conclusion— Excellent patency rates were achieved using both BITA configurations with no significant differences in terms of MACCE up to 19 months postoperatively, but longer-term results remain to be established.BACKGROUND: Bilateral internal thoracic arteries (BITA) demonstrated superiority over other grafts to the left coronary system in terms of patency and survival benefit. Several BITA configurations are proposed for left-sided myocardial revascularization, but the ideal BITA assemblage is still unidentified. METHODS AND RESULTS: From 03/2003 to 08/2006, 1297 consecutive patients underwent isolated bypass surgery in our institution. 481 patients met the inclusion criteria for randomization, and 304 (64%) were randomized. Patients were allocated to BITA in situ grafting (n=147) or Y configuration (n=152) then evaluated for clinical, functional, and angiographic outcome after 6 months and 3 years. Patient telephone interviews were conducted every 3 months and a stress test performed twice yearly under the referring cardiologists supervision. Angiographic follow-up was performed 6 months after surgery. The primary and secondary end points were, respectively, major adverse cerebrocardiovascular events (MACCE) and the proportion of ITA grafts that were completely occluded at follow-up angiography. More arterial anastomoses were performed in patients randomized to the Y than the in situ configuration (3.2 versus 2.4; P>0.001). No significant difference between the 2 groups in terms of hospital mortality or morbidity was found. At follow-up, there was no significant difference in any MACCE rate between the 2 groups. 450 out of 464 anastomosis (97%) in the BITA Y group and 287 of 295 (97%) in the BITA in situ group were controlled patent (P=0.99). CONCLUSIONS: Excellent patency rates were achieved using both BITA configurations with no significant differences in terms of MACCE up to 19 months postoperatively, but longer-term results remain to be established.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 1996

Multilevel somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) for spinal cord monitoring in descending thoracic and thoraco-abdominal aortic surgery

Jean-Michel Guerit; Robert Verhelst; Jean Rubay; Amine Matta; Gebrine El Khoury; R. Dion

The usefulness of somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) monitoring as a means of preventing paraplegia in descending aorta surgery was evaluated in 47 consecutive cases operated on for isthmic (14 cases), thoracic (22 cases), or thoraco-abdominal (11 cases) repair. An aortic dissection was found in 11 cases (acute in 6). Somatosensory evoked potentials were obtained by unilateral left and right posterior tibial nerve (PTN) stimulation at the ankle and recordings were performed on four channels: peripheral nerve, lumbar spinal, brain-stem, and cortical recordings. Our experience led to the following current strategy: the establishment of atrio(aorto)-femoral(aortic) bypass (29 cases), proximal and distal aortic cross-clamping, aortic repair with reimplantation of the culprit artery(ies) as indicated by SEP alterations. Five types of SEP alterations were defined on the basis of the neural level involved: type I (27.7% of cases) = distal spinal ischemia due to proximal aortic cross-clamping in the absence of bypass; type II (21.3%) = PTN ischemia due to left common femoral artery cross-clamping; type III (12.8%) = segmental spinal ischemia due to the exclusion of critical feeding arteries; type IV (4.3%) = ischemia in the left carotid artery territory; type V (4.3%) = global brain hypoperfusion due to systemic hypotension. Forty-five patients survived the operation and could be tested for neurological dysfunction. Three patients presented a postoperative spinal cord deficit, but this deficit was already present preoperatively in one case, so that the actual incidence of a new paraplegia in our series was 2/45 cases (4.4%). One of the two cases was clearly a delayed paraplegia with SEP alterations appearing several hours after the operation. Somatosensory evoked potentials were evaluated on the basis of their sensitivity, specificity, and impact on the surgical strategy. Regarding SEP sensitivity, we did not encounter any unexpected immediate paraplegia, but the critical factor appeared to be the duration of SEP absence due to spinal cord ischemia, which, according to the literature, should never exceed 30 min; after a longer absence, SEP return does not guarantee neurological recovery. Somatosensory evoked potential specificity was also 100%, but only 58% of the abnormalities found were actually consequent to spinal cord ischemia, the rest of the abnormalities being consequent to peripheral nerve or brain ischemia. Finally, SEP monitoring had a significant impact on surgical strategy in 19% of the cases. It is concluded that distal aortic perfusion and multilevel SEP monitoring play a significant role in preventing paraplegia in descending aorta surgery.

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Gebrine El Khoury

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Philippe Noirhomme

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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R. Dion

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Parla Astarci

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Jean Rubay

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Alain Poncelet

Université catholique de Louvain

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David Glineur

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Valérie Lacroix

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Claude Hanet

Catholic University of Leuven

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