Abstract

Cardiac events continue to be the leading cause of perioperative mortality following peripheral vascular reconstruction. The role of preoperative cardiac screening and prophylactic myocardial revascularization in patients without clinical evidence of coronary artery disease is undefined. Fifteen patients with no clinical evidence of coronary artery disease who were found to have reversible defects on dipyridamole-thallium scans and severe correctable coronary artery disease underwent aortocoronary artery bypass grafting. There was one (6.7%) operative death. Three patients (20%) developed postoperative complications: two atrial fibrillation and one breakdown of the saphenous vein harvest site. Thirteen patients underwent subsequent peripheral vascular surgery: seven had abdominal aortic procedures, three infrainguinal reconstruction, two carotid endarterectomy and one carotid-subclavian artery bypass. There were no perioperative or late deaths, cardiac complication, electrocardiographic changes, or episodes of angina associated with the peripheral vascular procedures. Thus, dipyridamole-thallium imaging appears to help select a group of symptom-free, but high cardiac risk, vascular patients in whom preparatory myocardial revascularization and subsequent peripheral vascular surgery can be performed with acceptable mortality and morbidity. The life expectancy of these patients may be improved and, specifically, the risk of their subsequent vascular surgery may be reduced by this approach.

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