‘No Touch’ Techniques for Porcelain Ascending Aorta: Comparison Between Cardiopulmonary Bypass with Femoral Artery Cannulation and Off-Pump Myocardial Revascularization

Abstract
Background: Detection of severe atherosclerotic ascending aorta during coronary artery bypass grafting requires alterations in the standard surgical technique to reduce the probability of stroke-related atheroembolization. Off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (OPCAB) confers the benefits of avoiding aortic cannulation and clamping, and may therefore attenuate this risk. Methods: OPCAB (n # 41) was compared to cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) using femoral arterial cannulation and hypothermic fibrillatory arrest (n = 15), in patients with porcelain ascending aorta undergoing myocardial revascularization. In both groups, a ‘no touchrsquo; technique was applied by avoiding aortic cannulation and clamping. Proximal anastomoses on the atherosclerotic aorta were avoided by arterial grafting, (in-situ or T-graft configurations) in all cases. Results: Operative mortality was comparable (2.4% and 6.6% in the OPCAB and CPB groups respectively, p # NS). The rate of adverse neurological events, (two strokes and one transient ischemic attack), was higher in the CPB group (p # 0.0164). Based on brain CT, the nature of the recorded stroke suggested retrograde emboli. Three year survival (Kaplan-Meier) for the OPCAB and CPB groups was 86.7% and 81.3%, respectively (p = NS). Occurrence of late neurological adverse events during follow-up (8–51 months) was similar. Conclusions: In patients with porcelain ascending aorta undergoing myocardial revascularization, neurological outcome of OPCAB patients is better than CPB using femoral artery cannulation.