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Mortality related to cardiac catheterization and angiography

✍ Scribed by Kennedy, J. Ward ;Baxley, William A. ;Bunnel, Ivan L. ;Gensini, Goffredo G. ;Messer, Joseph V. ;Mudd, J. Gerard ;Noto, Thomas J. ;Paulin, Sven ;Pichard, Augusto D. ;Sheldon, William C. ;Cohen, Marc ;,


Book ID
102790739
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1982
Tongue
English
Weight
847 KB
Volume
8
Category
Article
ISSN
0098-6569

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

During a 14‐month period, 75 deaths occurring in relation to 53,581 cardiac catheterizations were consecutively and prospectively reported to the Registry Committee of the Society for Cardiac Angiography. Three of the patients died several days after their catheterization from an unrelated cause and are excluded from this analysis. There were 21 patients (group I) who arrived at the laboratory in extremis and whose deaths were expected irrespective of the catheterization. Most of these patients suffered from recent myocardial infarctions and cardiogenic shock, or had complex congenital malformations. In 35 patients (group II), a cardiovascular complication occurring during the catheterization resulted in death. In 16 patients (group III) catheterization seemed uneventful, but death occurred suddenly 10 min to 10 h after the procedure. Of these 16 patients, eight had left main coronary artery obstruction β‰₯ 90%, five had three‐vessel disease all with 90% obstructions, one had 2‐vessel disease both with 90% obstructions, and two had critical aortic stenosis.

The 51 unexpected deaths (groups II and III) were considered to be causally related to the procedure, a mortality rate of 0.10%. Subsets with an increased mortality rate (M), were patients with: (a) left main disease > 50% (M = 0.94%); (b) ejection fraction < 30% (M = 0.54%); (c) NYHA class III or IV (m = 0.24%); (d) age over 60 years (M = 0.23%); or (e) three‐vessel disease (M = 0.13%).

In conclusion, catheterization related mortality occurs mostly in patients with far advanced cardiac disease. Nearly 1/3 of the unexpected deaths occurred suddenly after a seemingly uneventful procedure. Close monitoring after catheterization of patients with similar characteristics (left main disease β‰₯ 90%, or three‐vessel disease all β‰₯ 90%) might disclose avenues for reducing mortality occurring after catheterization.


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✍ Mahrer, Peter R. ;Eshoo, Norman πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1981 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 311 KB πŸ‘ 2 views

## Abstract The cost of and hospitalization required for cardiac catheterization led us to evaluate this procedure in 308 adult outpatients. Patients were scheduled on the basis of stability of symptoms. Two hundred eighty‐eight underwent left heart catheterizations and coronary arteriography. Nine