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European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Vol 5, 99-103, Copyright © 1991 by European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
KS Naunheim, KA Kesler, AC Fiore, M Turrentine, LM Hammell, JW Brown, Y Mohammed and DG Pennington
The optimal management of effusive pericardial disease remains
controversial. Subxiphoid drainage has been criticized for a high
recurrence rate while transthoracic procedures (window or pericardiectomy)
are more invasive operations with greater potential for morbidity. We
compared subxiphoid (SX group) and transthoracic (TT group) drainage in 131
patients (age range from 1 month to 81 years) treated from 1979 to the
present. The etiology of effusion included cancer (38), uremia (24),
infection (27), radiation (9), and other (33) causes. The two groups had
similar age and sex distribution, etiology, and fluid volume. There was no
difference in the operative mortality between the two groups (SX 15%, TT
13%, p = NS). Patients undergoing thoracotomy for treatment of effusive
pericardial disease had a higher incidence of respiratory complications as
defined by the presence of pneumonia, pleural effusion, prolonged
ventilation, and need for reintubation (SX 11%, TT 35%, p less than 0.005).
This may account, in part, for the longer mean hospital stay in
transthoracic group (14.4 vs. 11.4 days). Nine patients were lost to
follow-up after hospital discharge. The remaining 104 hospital survivors
were followed for between 1 month and 11 years (mean 34 months, cumulative
of 297 patient years). Three patients in each group experienced fluid
recurrence and all but one were successfully treated by needle aspiration
or percutaneous catheter placement. Following discharge, no patient
required reoperation for effusive or constrictive pericardial disease or
died from tamponade. There were no significant differences in 5-year
actuarial survival (SX 54%, TT 49%) or actuarial freedom from recurrence
(SX 89%, TT 93%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Pericardial drainage: subxiphoid vs. transthoracic approach
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, St. Louis University Medical Center, MO.
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