Publication:
In-Hospital and Long-Term outcomes after Open-Heart Surgery in Turkish Octogenarians: a Single-Center Study

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Date
2021-01-01T00:00:00Z
Authors
Aksut, Mehmet
Gunay, Deniz
Ozer, Tanil
Yerlikhan, Ozge Altas
Selcuk, Emre
Kirali, Mehmet Kaan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue

Metrics

Search on Google Scholar

Abstract
Objective: We aimed to analyze the early and long-term results of open-heart surgery in Turkish patients aged 80 years or older who were operated on at our center. Methods: All patients aged 80 years or older who underwent surgery between January 2000 and December 2013 at a high-level heart center were included in the study. The in-hospital data of study patients were obtained from the electronic database and from the hospital files. Survival data were analyzed as a long-term outcome. Results: A total of 245 patients aged 80-93 years were evaluated in the study. The patients were followed up 5.4±3.7 years after open-heart surgery. In-hospital mortality rates were 10% in elective cases and 15.1% overall. Age ≥85 years, chronic kidney disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and emergency surgery were independent predictors of in-hospital mortality. The median survival time was found to be 4.4±0.3 years for all participants. The long-term survival of patients who underwent emergency cardiac surgery was significantly lower than that of elective patients (log-rank <0.001). Conclusion: Octogenarians have satisfactory long-term outcomes after open-heart surgery when operated electively. On the other hand, patients operated under emergency conditions have worse inhospital outcomes and long-term follow-up results.
Description
Keywords
Aged, 80 and over, Cardiac Surgical Procedures, Elective Surgical Procedures, Emergency Service, Hospital, Follow-Up Studies
Citation
Aksut M., Gunay D., Ozer T., Yerlikhan O. A. , Selcuk E., Kirali M. K. , -In-Hospital and Long-Term outcomes after Open-Heart Surgery in Turkish Octogenarians: a Single-Center Study-, BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, cilt.36, sa.1, ss.64-70, 2021
Page Views

0

File Downloads

3

Sustainable Development Goals