Literature DB >> 18539474

Coronary surgery in patients with diabetes mellitus: a risk-adjusted study on early outcome.

Pedro E Antunes1, J Ferrão de Oliveira, Manuel J Antunes.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We aimed at determining the effect of diabetes mellitus (diabetes) on short-term mortality and morbidity in a cohort of patients with ischemic disease undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) at our institution.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: A total of 4567 patients undergoing isolated CABG in a 10-year period were studied. Diabetes mellitus was present in 22.6% of the cases but the percentage increased from 19.1% in the beginning to 27% in the end of the study period (p<0.0001 for the decade time-trend). Compared with non-diabetic patients, the group with diabetes was older (61.5+/-8.4 years vs 60.4+/-9.5 years), had a higher body mass index (26.4+/-2.2 vs 26.0+/-2.2), comprised more women (17.5% vs 10.1%), and had a greater incidence of peripheral vascular disease (13.3% vs 8.8%), cerebrovascular disease (8.3% vs 4.3%), renal failure (2.7% vs 1.1%), cardiomegaly (14.0% vs 10.9%), class III-IV angina (43.4% vs 39.0%), triple-vessel disease (80.9% vs 73.7%) and patients with left ventricular dysfunction (all p<0.05). Demographic and peri-procedural data were registered prospectively in a computerized institutional database. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to assess the influence of diabetes as an independent risk factor for in-hospital mortality and morbidity.
RESULTS: The overall in-hospital mortality was 0.96% [n=44; diabetics: 1.0%, non-diabetics: 0.9% (p=0.74)]. The mortality of patients with diabetes decreased from 2.7% in the early period to 0.7% in the late period (p=0.03 for the time-trend). Postoperative in-hospital complications were comparable in the two groups in univariate analysis, with only cerebrovascular accident and prolonged length of stay being significantly higher in the diabetic patients (all p<0.05). In multivariate analysis, diabetes was not found to be an independent risk factor for in-hospital mortality (OR=0.61; 95% CI=0.28-1.30; p=0.19), but predicted the occurrence of mediastinitis (OR=1.80; 95% CI=1.01-3.22; p=0.049).
CONCLUSIONS: Despite worse demographic and clinical characteristics, diabetic patients could be surgically revascularized with low mortality and morbidity, comparable with control patients. Hence, our data do not support diabetes as a risk factor for significantly adverse early outcome following CABG.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18539474     DOI: 10.1016/j.ejcts.2008.05.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Cardiothorac Surg        ISSN: 1010-7940            Impact factor:   4.191


  6 in total

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Authors:  Younes Moutakiallah; Khadija Benzaghmout; Mahdi Aithoussa; Nourreddine Atmani; Brahim Amahzoune; Abdedaim Hatim; Mohamed Drissi; Aatif Benyass; Youssef ElBekkali; Abdelatif Boulahya
Journal:  Pan Afr Med J       Date:  2014-03-13

Review 2.  Medanta insulin protocols in patients undergoing cardiac surgery.

Authors:  Beena Bansal; Ambrish Mithal; Pravin Carvalho; Yatin Mehta; Naresh Trehan
Journal:  Indian J Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2014-07

3.  Feasibility, efficacy, and safety of a simple insulin infusion protocol in a large volume cardiac surgery unit in India.

Authors:  Beena Bansal; Ambrish Mithal; Pravin Carvalho; Yatin Mehta; Naresh Trehan
Journal:  Indian J Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2015 Jan-Feb

4.  Sex and age difference in risk factor distribution, trend, and long-term outcome of patients undergoing isolated coronary artery bypass graft surgery.

Authors:  Babak Sattartabar; Ali Ajam; Mina Pashang; Arash Jalali; Saeed Sadeghian; Hamideh Mortazavi; Soheil Mansourian; Jamshid Bagheri; Abbas-Ali Karimi; Kaveh Hosseini
Journal:  BMC Cardiovasc Disord       Date:  2021-09-23       Impact factor: 2.298

5.  Blood glucose concentration for predicting poor outcomes in patients with and without impaired glucose metabolism undergoing off-pump coronary artery bypass surgery - long-term observational study.

Authors:  Wojciech Szychta; Franciszek Majstrak; Grzegorz Opolski; Krzysztof J Filipiak
Journal:  Postepy Kardiol Interwencyjnej       Date:  2016-08-19       Impact factor: 1.426

6.  Impact of Pre-, Intra-and Post-Operative Parameters on In-Hospital Mortality in Patients Undergoing Emergency Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting: A Scarce Single-Center Experience in Resource-Scare Setting.

Authors:  Doan Quoc Hung; Nguyen Thai Minh; Hoang-Long Vo; Nguyen Sinh Hien; Nguyen Quang Tuan
Journal:  Vasc Health Risk Manag       Date:  2021-05-17
  6 in total

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