Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease (Nov 2022)

Optimizing Anastomoses Technique in Orthotopic Heart Transplantation: Comparison of Biatrial, Bicaval and Modified Bicaval Technique

  • Moritz Benjamin Immohr,
  • Udo Boeken,
  • Raphael Romano Bruno,
  • Yukiharu Sugimura,
  • Arash Mehdiani,
  • Hug Aubin,
  • Ralf Westenfeld,
  • Igor Tudorache,
  • Artur Lichtenberg,
  • Payam Akhyari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd9110404
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 404

Abstract

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Implantation techniques for orthotopic heart transplantation (HTx) have evolved over the centuries. Recently new approaches of modified bicaval techniques to minimize warm ischemia are gaining popularity in the literature. Between 2010 and 2022 n = 238 patients underwent HTx in our department. The recipients were retrospectively reviewed and divided regarding their anastomoses’ technique. Anastomoses were sutured either in biatrial (n = 37), bicaval (n = 191) or in a modified bicaval (n = 10) manner with suturing of the superior cava vein and A. pulmonalis anastomosis after removing the aortic cross-clamp during the reperfusion. Warm ischemia was 62 ± 11 min for biatrial, 66 ± 15 min for bicaval, but only 48 ± 10 min for modified bicaval technique (p p = 0.01). The modified bicaval technique enables to decrease the crucial warm ischemia during HTx compared to both biatrial and regular bicaval techniques. Therefore, we strongly recommend bicaval anastomoses, ideally in a modified manner.

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