| Literature DB >> 32643836 |
Karel M Van Praet1,2, Antonia van Kampen1,2, Markus Kofler1, Gregor Richter1, Simon H Sündermann2,3, Alexander Meyer1,2,4, Axel Unbehaun1,2, Stephan Kurz1,3, Stephan Jacobs1,2, Volkmar Falk1,2,3,4,5, Jörg Kempfert1,2.
Abstract
Less-invasive techniques for cardiothoracic surgical procedures are designed to limit surgical trauma, but the technical requirements and preoperative planning are more demanding than those for conventional sternotomy. Patient selection, interdisciplinary collaboration, and surgical skills are key factors for procedural success. Aortic valve replacement is frequently performed through an upper hemisternotomy, but the right anterior minithoracotomy represents an even less traumatic, technical advancement. Preoperative assessment of the ascending aorta in relation to the sternum is mandatory to select patients and the intercostal access site. This description of the surgical technique focuses on the specific procedural details including the obligatory planning with computed tomography and our cannulation strategy. We also sought to define the anatomical ascending aorta-sternal relationship, as it is of utmost importance in preoperative computed tomographic planning.Entities:
Keywords: RALT; SAVR; aortic valve stenosis; cardiac surgery; minimally invasive; minimally invasive cardiac surgery; minimally invasive surgical aortic valve replacement; right anterior minithoracotomy; surgical aortic valve replacement
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32643836 DOI: 10.1111/jocs.14756
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Card Surg ISSN: 0886-0440 Impact factor: 1.620