Literature DB >> 3486056

The effect of medical and surgical treatment on subsequent sudden cardiac death in patients with coronary artery disease: a report from the Coronary Artery Surgery Study.

D R Holmes, K B Davis, M B Mock, L D Fisher, B J Gersh, T Killip, M Pettinger.   

Abstract

The effect of medical and surgical treatment on subsequent sudden cardiac death was assessed in 13,476 patients in the Coronary Artery Surgery Study registry who had significant coronary artery disease, operable vessels, and no significant valvular disease. (Patients were assigned to medical or surgical therapy on the basis of clinical judgment and not according to a randomization scheme; therefore, biases associated with unknown variables could not be evaluated.) Sudden cardiac death occurred in 452 patients (3.4%) during a mean follow-up of 4.6 years. Five year survival free of sudden death for medically treated patients was 94 +/- 0.3%, and that for surgically treated patients was 98 +/- 0.2% (p less than .0001). Twelve baseline clinical, electrocardiographic, and angiographic variables were significantly different between patients alive at the last follow-up and those suffering sudden death. Data on these variables were available for 11,508 patients. Sudden death occurred in 257 (4.9%) of 5258 medically treated and 101 (1.6%) of 6250 surgically treated patients. In a high-risk patient subset with three-vessel disease and history of congestive heart failure, 91% of surgically treated patients had not suffered sudden death compared with 69% of medically treated patients. After Cox survival analysis was used to correct for baseline variables, surgical treatment had an independent effect on sudden death (p less than .0001). This reduction was most pronounced in high-risk patients.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3486056     DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.73.6.1254

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  16 in total

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Review 4.  Sudden cardiac death in patients with congestive heart failure: toward a unified rational treatment approach.

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9.  All-cause mortality benefit of coronary revascularization vs. medical therapy in patients without known coronary artery disease undergoing coronary computed tomographic angiography: results from CONFIRM (COronary CT Angiography EvaluatioN For Clinical Outcomes: An InteRnational Multicenter Registry).

Authors:  James K Min; Daniel S Berman; Allison Dunning; Stephan Achenbach; Mouaz Al-Mallah; Matthew J Budoff; Filippo Cademartiri; Tracy Q Callister; Hyuk-Jae Chang; Victor Cheng; Kavitha Chinnaiyan; Benjamin J W Chow; Ricardo Cury; Augustin Delago; Gudrun Feuchtner; Martin Hadamitzky; Joerg Hausleiter; Philipp Kaufmann; Ronald P Karlsberg; Yong-Jin Kim; Jonathon Leipsic; Fay Y Lin; Erica Maffei; Fabian Plank; Gilbert Raff; Todd Villines; Troy M Labounty; Leslee J Shaw
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2012-10-09       Impact factor: 29.983

10.  Coronary artery bypass grafting in patients with profound ventricular dysfunction.

Authors:  F J Baumgartner; B O Omari; S Goldberg; A B Pandya; A B Pandya; A M Daland; S Sun; J C Millikin
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