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Endoscopic
Approach at Genesis Signals New Trend in Heart Bypass Surgery (Posted
2/20/07)
When Jerry Johnson had quadruple bypass surgery at Genesis Medical
Center, Davenport, cutting-edge technology spared him the pain and
difficult recovery of having long incisions in his arm and
leg.
Particularly noteworthy during his surgery was that an artery was
removed or "harvested" from his arm using only two small
incisions, instead of the usual elbow to wrist incision. The
pioneering procedure, called endoscopic radial artery harvest,
represents a new trend in heart bypass surgery. It sets
Genesis apart in the Quad Cities region and makes the hospital one
of only a couple in Iowa to offer the procedure.
The new medical technology is helping to dramatically reduce the
rigors of coronary artery bypass graft surgery for patients like
59-year-old Johnson of West Burlington.
"The new direction in heart bypass surgery is to make patients
feel less like they have had a very major operation. That
means smaller, less-intrusive incisions," says Genesis heart
surgeon Nicholas V. Augelli, M.D., who brought endoscopic radial
artery harvesting to Genesis last month.
"Endoscopic vessel harvesting has tremendous potential benefits
for patients because it reduces arm and leg wound complications and
offers better results."
A New Day in Bypass Surgery
To understand the significance of the less-invasive option is
first to understand how bypass surgery is performed.
A bypass operation really includes two surgical procedures:
one in which the surgeon uses a healthy blood vessel to
"bypass" the blocked arteries of the heart, and the second
to remove or harvest the healthy blood vessel. This blood
vessel, traditionally removed from the leg, is now taken from the
arm as well. It is then used to construct the bypass
grafts.
Recent advances in medical technology now make it possible to
harvest vessels in a minimally invasive way, through very small
incisions.
"Traditionally, the vein has been removed from the leg through
a long incision that may have stretched from the ankle to the
groin," Dr. Augelli says. "Often, patients having
this method of vein removal endure more pain from the leg incision
than from the chest incision. Some patients, particularly
those with diabetes, face complications that are worse than the
actual heart surgery."
Although 80 percent of coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) cases
performed today utilize the vein from the leg, the radial artery
from the arm is harvested in about 20 percent of the bypass
procedures each year. That percentage likely will grow, as
more patients require multi-vessel bypass surgery or additional
bypass procedures.
At Genesis, Dr. Augelli is shifting the trend and harvesting vessels
with an endoscopic approach whenever possible. After the first
successful endoscopic procedure last month, he also plans to use
more radial arteries for bypass grafts.
"Radial arteries make more durable grafts than veins," Dr.
Augelli says. "The leg veins are not really meant to hold
high pressure. They are built to be in a lower pressure
system, and we have altered what they were made to be and placed
them in a very high-stress situation. So after a period of
time, they will fail."
The survival rate of a radial artery bypass is 80 percent in 10
years - an improvement over a 50 percent survival rate in 10 years
for vein bypasses.
A Less-Invasive Approach
During Jerry Johnson's surgery, cardiovascular operating room
nurse Drew Starenko, RNFA, removed the radial artery in the arm
using an endoscopic approach. he has the distinction of being
the first at Genesis - and the first in eastern Iowa - to remove the
radial artery using Boston Scientific's VasoView®
Endoscopic Vessel Harvesting System.
At the same time, cardiovascular operating room nurse Jennifer
Nelson, RNFA, harvested the saphenous vein in Johnson's leg using
the endoscopic technology. That avoided the traditional long
incision that can stretch from the ankle to the groin.
With the support of the entire Operating Room team, Starenko and
Nelson harvested vessels in the arm and leg while Dr. Augelli
removed the internal mammary artery located underneath the sternum,
the most important graft and first vessel of choice for heart bypass
surgery.
During the procedure, Starenko and Nelson insert the endoscopic
vessel harvesting system into the incision and use it to dissect the
radial artery in the arm and the saphenous vein in the leg.
The system then infuses carbon dioxide gas into the tunnel, which
provides the necessary space for them to harvest the
vessels.
Once the vessel is separated from the surrounding tissue, they use
the system to retract, cauterize, and divide tributaries to the
artery or vein that will be harvested. When this is completed,
the vessel is harvested intact and removed from the patient's arm or
leg.
The harvested vessel is then used as a graft that Dr. Augelli sews
in place to bypass the blocked coronary artery.
"It's fascinating to be a part of the endoscopic vessel
harvesting and very rewarding to see how this benefits our
patients," Starenko says. "This has significantly
changed wound healing for patients because now they don't have huge
incisions that need to heal, and their pain level is dramatically
decreased. I've worked on patients who woke up from surgery
unable to tell which leg I had operated on."
He credits Dr. Augelli for bringing radial artery harvesting and a
more minimally invasive approach to bypass surgery at Genesis.
He also credits Vari Nelson, manager of Perioperative Services, who
was instrumental in allowing him and Jennifer Nelson to pursue the
training. "It's an entire team effort with everyone
that's involved in the O.R."
A Personal Perspective
At the heart of the technological advancements is the personal
impact it has on bypass patients like Jerry Johnson, who have faced
their own mortality during open-heart surgery.
The supervisor and farmer who prided himself on never missing a day
of work in 30 years, found out he had heart disease in a roundabout
way - while he was undergoing tests for bladder cancer. His
need for a quadruple bypass, mitral valve repair, and aortic valve
replacement would be far more threatening to his health than the
early-stage cancer.
"If he hadn't undergone the tests for the bladder cancer, we
likely wouldn't have found out about the heart problems," says
his wife, Katie. "In a way, the bladder cancer saved him
because it led to the diagnosis about his heart. But the heart
problem has complicated his treatment for the bladder
cancer."
Jerry Johnson says he never realized heart disease was slowing him
down until after he had the bypass surgery and had renewed
energy.
"I'd built a garage over the summer, built a house over the
last two years and had been slinging cement block and running over
scaffolds and never once realized I had anything wrong with my
heart," he says. "I've had aches and pains before,
but I shook them off and kept going. I thought I felt great,
and this has all been a shock."
Thanks to the endoscopic technology at Genesis, he has only small
scars on his forearm and leg where the vessels were harvested.
Endoscopic harvest of the vessels eliminates major incisions and
enables patients like Jerry Johnson to rehabilitate sooner and begin
their pursuit of a heart-healthy lifestyle, Dr. Augelli says.
"We're pleased to be able to offer this less-invasive option to
our patients."
-- by Linda Barlow, Genesis
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