The AHA Guidelines and Scientific Statements Handbook

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The AHA Guidelines and Scientifi c Statements Handbook


Smokers who quit successfully after CABG are
rewarded with improved survival, improved graft
patency, less recurrent angina, fewer hospital admis-
sions, and better maintenance of employment over
persistent smokers [66]. In addition, persistent
smokers have more MIs and reoperations than those
who stop smoking [67].


Cardiac rehabilitation
Class I
Cardiac rehabilitation should be offered to all eli-
gible patients after CABG. (Level of Evidence: B)
Cardiac rehabilitation including early ambulation
during hospitalization, outpatient prescriptive exer-
cise training, family education, and sexual counsel-
ing have been shown to reduce mortality [1,68,69].
Outpatient rehabilitation beginning 4 to 8 weeks
after CABG and consisting of three-times weekly
educational and exercise sessions for 3 months is
associated with an improvement in exercise toler-
ance and cholesterol levels [70].


Special patient subsets


CABG in the elderly: age 70 and older
Elderly patients have a higher incidence of left main
disease, multivessel disease, LV dysfunction, and
reoperation as the indication for surgery, and for
many, concomitant valve surgery [1]. These patients
also have more comorbid conditions and increased
rates of fatal and nonfatal complications [71,72].
Operative mortality (%) is shown as a function of
age in Fig. 7.2. A higher operative mortality occurs
for all identifi ed risk factors in patients aged 75 years
or older than for those less than 65 [1]. Emergency
surgery in the elderly confers up to a 10-fold increase
in risk (3.5–35%), urgent surgery a 3-fold increase
(3.5–15%), hemodynamic instability a 3- to 10-fold
increase, and an LVEF <0.20 up to a 10-fold increase
[1]. OPCAB may be advantageous in high-risk
patients, particularly those with an LVEF less than
0.35 [73,74].
It should be emphasized that long-term survival
and functional improvement can be achieved in the
elderly patient despite severe cardiovascular disease
and an urgent indication for surgery [75]. The 5-
year survival of such patients who recover from
surgery is comparable to that of the general
population matched for age, sex, and race [76,77].


Preoperative variables associated with poor long-
term survival in elderly patients are atrial fi brilla-
tion, smoking, peripheral vascular disease, and poor
renal function, and an unsatisfactory functional
outcome has been infl uenced by hypertension, cere-
brovascular insuffi ciency, and poor renal function
[78]. Age alone should not be a contraindication to
CABG if it is concluded that long-term benefi ts out-
weigh the procedural risk [1,79].

CABG in women
In-hospital mortality and morbidity and long-term
survival after CABG appear related more to risk
factors and patient characteristics than to gender,
although some studies demonstrate increased risk
for female low- and moderate-risk patients [80].
Women may be particularly vulnerable to postop-
erative congestive heart failure, low cardiac output
syndrome [81–83], and blood loss [84]. However,
CABG should not be delayed or denied to women
who have the appropriate indication for revascular-
ization [1].

CABG in patients with diabetes
Patients with diabetes have a higher mortality after
MI and CABG than patients who do not have dia-
betes [1]. However, results from the BARI trial
showed that patients with multivessel CASHD who
were being for diabetes at baseline had a signifi cantly
better survival after CABG versus PTCA (Fig. 7.3)

Operative mortality %

8 7 6 5 4 3 2

40–49 50–59

1
60–6465–69
Age in years

(1.65)

70–7475–79 >80

2.17

2.76

3.36

5.28

8.31

Fig. 7.2 Operative mortality (%) for CABG in various age cohorts.
Data derived from Hannan et al. Am Heart J. 1994;128:1184–91.
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