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find Author "HUO Qiang" 3 results
  • Risk factors for early in-hospital death in patients with acute Stanford type A aortic dissection

    Objective To investigate the risk factors for early in-hospital death in patients with acute Stanford type A aortic dissection and emergency surgical treatment. MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 189 patients with acute Stanford type A aortic dissection who underwent surgery in the First Affiliated Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University between January 2017 and January 2020. There were 160 males and 29 females with an average age of 46.35±9.17 years. All patients underwent surgical treatment within 24 hours. The patients were divided into a survival group (n=160) and a death group (n=29) according to their outcome (survival or death) during hospitalization in our hospital. Perioperative clinical data were analyzed and compared between the two groups. Results The overall in-hospital mortality was 15.34% (29/189). There was a statistical difference between the two groups in white blood cell count, blood glucose, aspartate aminotransferase (AST), bilirubin, creatinine, operative method, operation time, aortic occlusion time, or cardiopulmonary bypass time (P<0.05). Multivariate regression identified white blood cell count [OR=1.142, 95%CI (1.008, 1.293)], bilirubin [OR=0.906, 95%CI (0.833, 0.985)], creatinine [OR=1.009, 95%CI (1.000, 1.017)], cardiopulmonary bypass time [OR=1.013, 95%CI (1.003, 1.024)] as postoperative risk factors for early in-hospital death in the patients undergoing acute Stanford type A aortic dissection surgery (P<0.05). Conclusion Our study demonstrated that white blood cell, bilirubin, creatinine and cardiopulmonary bypass time are independent risk factors for in-hospital death after acute Stanford type A aortic dissection surgery.

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  • Clinical efficacy of endoscopic minimally invasive versus median sternotomy thoracotomy for atrial myxoma: A systematic review and meta-analysis

    ObjectiveTo compare the clinical efficacy of endoscopic minimally invasive surgery and median sternotomy thoracotomy in the treatment of atrial myxoma by meta-analysis.MethodsWe searched CBM, CNKI, Wanfang Data, VIP, PubMed, the Cochrane Library and EMbase to collect relevant researches on atrial myxoma and endoscopic minimally invasive surgery. The retrieval time was from the establishment of the database to September 2020. Two reviewers independently screened the literature, extracted data and evaluated the bias risk of included studies by the Newcastle-Ottawa scale (NOS). Then, the meta-analysis was performed by Stata 16.0.ResultsTen articles were included in the study, all of which were case-control studies. The quality of literature was grade B in 5 articles and grade A in 5 articles. The sample size of surgery was 938 patients, including 480 patients in the endoscopic minimally invasive group, 458 patients in the median thoracotomy group, and 595 patients in follow-up. A total of 18 outcome indexes were included in the meta-analysis. The combined results of 9 outcome indicators were statistically significant: cardiopulmonary bypass time (SMD=0.32, 95%CI 0.00 to 0.63, P=0.048); ventilator assisted ventilation time (SMD=−0.35, 95%CI −0.56 to −0.15, P=0.001), ICU stay time (SMD=–0.42, 95%CI −0.62 to −0.21, P<0.001); postoperative hospitalization time (SMD=−0.91, 95%CI −1.22 to −0.60, P<0.001); postoperative drainage volume (SMD=−2.48, 95%CI −5.24 to 0.28, P<0.001); postoperative new onset atrial fibrillation (OR=0.29, 95%CI 0.12 to 0.67, P= 0.005); postoperative pneumonia (OR=0.09, 95%CI 0.02 to 0.36, P=0.001); postoperative blood transfusion (OR=0.22, 95%CI 0.11 to 0.45, P<0.001); incision satisfaction (OR=83.15, 95%CI 1.24 to 5563.29, P=0.039).ConclusionAvailable evidence suggests that median thoracotomy requires shorter cardiopulmonary bypass time than endoscopic minimally invasive surgery; during the 5-year follow-up after surgery and discharge, ICU stay time, postoperative hospital stay, postoperative drainage, new atrial fibrillation after surgery, postoperative pneumonia, postoperative blood transfusion, satisfactory incision, endoscopic minimally invasive surgery showed better results than median sternotomy thoracotomy.

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  • Predictive value of glycemia and serum calcium in aortic root dilation disease: A propensity score matching study

    ObjectiveTo explore the effects of glycemia and serum calcium on occurrence and development of aortic root dilation disease. MethodsThe clinical data of patients with aortic root dilation who underwent surgical treatment in the Department of Cardiac Surgery of the First Affiliated Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University from January 2011 to October 2021 were retrospectively collected. They were divided into two groups according to whether they were accompanied by acute aortic dissection (Stanford type A), and were matched with the propensity scoring method. Logistic univariate and multivariate regression analyses were used to analyze the glycemia and the serum calcium of the patients in 24 hours at admission, and their receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were plotted. Results Finally 184 pairs of patients were matched, including 297 males with an average age of 48.76±9.62 years and 71 females with an average age of 49.97±10.97 years. There were statistical differences in ethnicity, history of hypertension, aortic root diameter, serum calcium and glycemia between the two groups (P<0.05). Logistic multivariate regression analyses results showed that age<40 years (OR=4.106, P=0.010), Han nationality (OR=2.863, P<0.001), aortic root diameter<45 mm (OR=5.063, P<0.001), hypertension (OR=2.736, P=0.001), hyperglycemia (OR=4.426, P<0.001) and hypocalcemia (OR=5.375, P<0.001) were independent risk factors for aortic root dilation disease with dissection. ROC curve analysis suggested that the area under the curve (AUC) of glycemia was 0.742 and the AUC of serum calcium was 0.737, all of which had some predictive value. Conclusion Hyperglycemia and hypocalcemia are risk factors for the development of aortic root dilation disease, and to some extent, they can be used as indicators for screening high-risk patients with aortic root dilation disease.

    Release date:2024-08-22 04:25 Export PDF Favorites Scan
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