Artigo Revisado por pares

Sinus Node Dysfunction After Orthotopic Heart Transplantation : The Vienna Experience 1987–1993

1994; Wiley; Volume: 17; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1540-8159.1994.tb03800.x

ISSN

1540-8159

Autores

Gottfried Heinz, C Kratochwill, Susanne Schmid, Gerhard Kreiner, Peter Siostrzonek, Richard Pacher, Michael Grimm, Günther Laufer, Heinz Gössinger,

Tópico(s)

Mechanical Circulatory Support Devices

Resumo

In the present study, the annual incidence of postoperative sinus node dysfunction and the type of sinus node abnormality after cardiac transplantation were followed over a 6 1/2-year period in 185 patients. Each year the sinus node function was systematically characterized by rhythm and corrected sinus node recovery time in a significant number of patients. Over the entire study period, there were 131 patients with normal sinus node function (corrected sinus node recovery time 318 +/- 55 msec) while 54 patients had latent (n = 24, sinus rhythm, corrected sinus node recovery time 8,053 +/- 2,198 msec) or manifest (n = 30, absence of sinus rhythm or pacemaker dependence) sinus node dysfunction. Twenty-nine patients had pacemaker placement. The incidence of sinus node dysfunction declined in absolute terms and when indexed by the actual number of patients transplanted per year (index 1987: 38.5; 1998: 17.6; 1989: 23.2; 1990: 29.1; 1991: 10.4; 1992: 7.5; 1993: 2.2). Among those with sinus node dysfunction, the annual percentage of patients presenting with prolonged recovery time, escape rhythm, and those reverting back to sinus rhythm until discharge did not change significantly over the study period (P = 0.22). On multivariate analysis, only the date of transplantation was significantly associated with the occurrence of postoperative sinus node deficiency (P = 0.0007) while age of recipient (P = 0.85) or donor (P = 0.96), the type of cardioplegia used (P = 0.09) and ischemic time (P = 0.09) were insignificant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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