Abstract

CAD is the leading cause of postoperative and late death following peripheral vascular reconstruction. In an attempt to reduce the eventual incidence of fatal myocardial infarction, preoperative coronary angiography was obtained in a series of 1000 patients under serious consideration for elective vascular procedures at The Cleveland Clinic. Those patients found to have severe, surgically correctable CAD were advised to undergo myocardial revascularization as a combined or preliminary operation. Severe, correctable CAD was discovered in 25% of the study group, including 34% of patients suspected to have CAD by conventional clinical criteria in comparison to only 14% of those who were not (p = 2.0 X 10(-13) ). Although severe CAD also was more common among men, patients more than 60 years of age, and diabetic patients, the clinical cardiac status was the most reliable indication of the yield of coronary angiography. Coronary artery bypass was performed in 216 patients, and the operative mortality rate for 1292 cardiac and vascular procedures was 2.6%. On the basis of this experience, an algorithm was constructed to select peripheral vascular patients for noninvasive cardiac screening or coronary angiography.

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