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Condition: Heart Failure
Procedure: Coronary Artery Bypass Graft

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Total 322 results found since Jan 2013.

Stroke and mortality rates after off-pump vs pump-assisted/no-clamp coronary artery bypass grafting
CONCLUSIONS: A hybrid strategy incorporating off-pump, pump-assisted, and combined offpump/pump-assisted techniques achieved very low stroke rates in patients undergoing coronary revascularization. Perioperative mortality was similar for all three techniques. Avoiding aortic clamping may be crucial for decreasing CABG-related stroke rates. Off-pump/no-bypass surgery had no significant advantage over the pump-assisted/no-clamp or combined techniques in reducing the stroke rate after coronary artery bypass grafting surgery.PMID:36168952 | DOI:10.23736/S0021-9509.22.12337-2
Source: The Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery - September 28, 2022 Category: Cardiovascular & Thoracic Surgery Authors: George V Letsou Fadi I Musfee Qianzi Zhang Gabriel Loor Andrew D Lee Source Type: research

No Association of Early Postoperative Heart Rate With Outcomes After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting
CONCLUSIONS: More research is needed to assess the usefulness of heart rate measurement in patients after CABG.PMID:36045044 | DOI:10.4037/ajcc2022545
Source: American Journal of Critical Care - August 31, 2022 Category: Nursing Authors: Yoshihisa Morita Junji Kumasawa Yoshihisa Miyamoto Junichi Izawa Vijay Krishnamoorthy Karthik Raghunathan Raquel R Bartz Annemarie Thompson Tetsu Ohnuma Source Type: research

Cost-effectiveness of follow-up invasive coronary angiography after percutaneous coronary stenting: a real-world observational cohort study in Japan
Conclusions FUICA increased the costs but did not improve clinical benefits. Thus, FUICA is not economically more attractive than CF alone. Trial registration number UMIN000039768.
Source: BMJ Open - August 30, 2022 Category: General Medicine Authors: Shiina, T., Goto-Hirano, K., Takura, T., Daida, H. Tags: Open access, Health economics Source Type: research

A novel approach to attribute responsible physicians using inpatient claims
CONCLUSIONS: We provide a robust method to attribute physicians to patients, which is a necessary tool to understand physician-level variation in quality of care within the inpatient acute care setting. The proposed method provides consistency across facilities and eliminates unattributed patients resulting from unsatisfied business rules.PMID:35852889 | DOI:10.37765/ajmc.2022.89185
Source: The American Journal of Managed Care - July 19, 2022 Category: Health Management Authors: Michael Korvink German Molina John Martin Henry Sullivant Laura H Gunn Source Type: research