About 1 in 80 surgery patients, 1 in 300 angioplasty patients have
stroke complication, new review shows
By Kathleen
Doheny
HealthDay Reporter
HealthDay Reporter
MONDAY, Aug. 20
(HealthDay News) -- The potential for a stroke is far more common after a
bypass than after angioplasty, new research reports, even though the risk after
either heart procedure is still relatively low.
A team of researchers
analyzed the results of 19 clinical trials involving nearly 11,000 patients who
were assigned randomly to get coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) or
angioplasty, also called PCA (percutaneous coronary intervention), a procedure
in which a balloon is used to re-open the clogged artery.
"At 30 days,
stroke was about four times more common with bypass surgery compared to
PCA," said study author Dr. Gregg Stone, a professor of medicine at
Columbia University Medical Center in New York City.
Stroke is an
important complication to track, Stone noted, adding, "Next to death, it
is probably the most feared complication."
The new analysis
is published online Aug. 21 in JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions. It
will also be published in the Aug. 28 issue of the Journal of the American
College of Cardiology.
In bypass
surgery, a healthy artery or vein taken from the patient is grafted, or
connected, to other arteries in the heart to bypass the blocked vessel. In
angioplasty, a catheter is inserted into the vessel to the point of blockage,
and then a balloon is inflated to clear it. Sometimes a stent is used to keep
open the vessel.
Stone's team
looked at the patients' stroke rates 30 days and a year after the procedures.
At 30 days, 1.2
percent of the surgery patients had suffered a stroke, compared with .34
percent of the angioplasty patients. At the one-year mark, 1.83 percent of the
surgery patients and .99 percent of the angioplasty patients had had a stroke.
Put another way:
"The likelihood of stroke is about 1 in 80 for patients who have surgery
and 1 in 300 for patients who have angioplasty," Stone said.
The finding held,
he added, even after researchers took into account the extent of disease and
other variables.
While some
patients clearly need surgery, Stone said, some have disease that could be
treated either way. For those patients, he said, the findings about stroke can
be weighed into their decision about which treatment to choose.
The study
findings echo what cardiologists have long believed, said Dr. Kirk Garratt,
director of interventional cardiology at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.
In bypass
surgery, he said, there is naturally more trauma to the body than there is
during angioplasty.
The new analysis,
he said, "confirms what has been accepted by cardiologists."
While some
patients have the option of either procedure, such as patients with only one or
two blockages, surgery is indicated if a patient has multiple blockages,
Garratt added.
According to the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, hospital discharge data from
2009 shows about 415,000 bypass graft surgeries and 605,000 angioplasties or
atherectomy (a similar procedure) were done that year.
More information
To learn more
about heart disease, go to the American Heart
Association.
SOURCES: Kirk
Garratt, M.D., director, interventional cardiology, Lenox Hill Hospital, New
York City; Greg Stone, M.D., professor, medicine, Columbia University Medical
Center, New York City; Aug. 21, 2012, JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions
and Aug. 28, 2012, Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Last Updated:
Aug. 20, 2012
Copyright © 2012 HealthDay.
All rights reserved.
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