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Original Article

The possibility of using celiac trunk branches as coronary artery bypass grafts

, , , , , & show all
Pages 165-168 | Accepted 29 Feb 1988, Published online: 12 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The internal mammary artery has proved to be superior to the saphenous vein for coronary artery bypass grafting, because of its arterial nature and closer approximation in size to the coronary arteries. But the internal mammary artery cannot reach the posterior surface of the heart as a pedicled graft. Two suitable intra-abdominal grafts can reach that surface, viz. the right gastroepiploic artery and the splenic artery. In experiments on eight dogs (weight 9–13.5 kg), the gastroepiploic artery was found to be too small for coronary artery anastomosis, and therefore the splenic artery was used. The size approximation with coronary artery (diameter <1 mm) was good. Four dogs survived the month of the study. In two of them the anastomosis was patent, in another the splenic artery was patent despite occlusion of the anastomosis, and in the fourth dog both anastomosis and graft were thrombosed. The possibility of using visceral arterial grafts in coronary surgery is discussed.

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