Abstract

Aim To study the relationship between the type of circulation, severity and localization of atherosclerotic damage of coronary arteries, results of laboratory and instrumental tests, and historical data in patients with multivascular coronary lesions and atrial fibrillation (AF) that developed after coronary bypass surgery.Material and methods This was a novel, retrospective study of data of patients after elective coronary bypass surgery at the Cardiac Surgery Department #1 of the N.V. Sklifosofsky Research Institute of Emergency Care from December, 2018 through December, 2020. The study included 100 patients. The main group consisted of 20 patients whose early postoperative period (first 7 days after surgery) was complicated with postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF) (mean age, 65.15±9.7 years). The comparison group included 80 patients without the POAF complication during the early postoperative period (mean age, 62.0±9.16 years). Prior to the coronary bypass surgery, all patients underwent clinical, laboratory, and instrumental examination. Based on data of selective coronary angiography, localization, severity of coronary atherosclerotic damage (according to angiographic classification), number of affected arteries, and the type of circulation were taken into account.Results Intergroup differences in the incidence and localization of myocardial infarctions in history, severity of arterial hypertension in history, class of chronic heart failure (according to the New York Heart Association, NYHA, classification), and heart rate were absent. 100 % of patients had left atrial (LA) dilatation not correlated with the development of AF in the early postoperative period. According to data of coronary angiography, there was no statistically significant association between the type of circulation and the development of POAF. The right type of myocardial blood supply prevailed in patients of both groups. There was no correlation between the severity and localization of coronary atherosclerotic lesions and the development of AF in the early postoperative period.Conclusion The development of AF following coronary bypass surgery was not associated with features of coronary atherosclerotic lesions, which may indicate active development of inter- and intra-systemic anastomoses in patients with long-term history of chronic coronary atherosclerosis.

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