Coronary artery bypass grafting within the first year after treatment of large acute myocardial infarctions with angioplasty or fibrinolysis

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Abstract

Objectives. To calculate the incidence and analyse and outcome after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) within the first year after randomisation of 1 572 patients with acute myocardial infarctions with ST-segment elevation (STEMI) to either percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or fibrinolysis. Design. The study includes 131 patients: 108 male and 23 female with a mean age 62 years. Results. The total 30-day mortality after CABG was 4.6% (7.5% in the PCI group and 2.6% in the fibrinolysis group). The 30-day mortality was 9.8% after CABG within the first 30-days and 1.3% after CABG within 31-365 days. The patients who were operated early had a reduced EF to 43% as compared to 50% in patients who were not operated or patients having CABG after 30-days (p = 0.002). Conclusion. CABG was performed within the first year after STEMI in 10% of patients randomised to fibrinolysis and in 6.7% of patients randomised to PCI. Patients having CABG within the first 30-days after treatment of STEMI had an increased mortality of 9.8%. © 2006 Taylor & Francis.

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Kjaergard, H. K., Nielsen, P. H., Andreasen, J. J., Steinbrüchel, D., Andersen, L. I., Rasmussen, K., … Mortensen, L. S. (2006). Coronary artery bypass grafting within the first year after treatment of large acute myocardial infarctions with angioplasty or fibrinolysis. Scandinavian Cardiovascular Journal, 40(1), 25–28. https://doi.org/10.1080/14017430500243614

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