Free internal mammary artery graft in myocardial revascularization

Abstract
Between August 1986 and March 1993, 124 patients (102 men; mean age of 59 years) underwent myocardial revascularization with the use of at least one free internal mammary artery (FIMA). This group represents 4.5% of the 2725 coronary bypasses performed during the same period. Seventy-six patients (61%) had suffered from at least one previous myocardial infarction. Forty-five patients (36%) had unstable angina; three-vessel disease was found in 100 cases (80.5%) and a left ventricular ejection fraction lower than 0.4 in 22 (17.7%). There were 18 (14.5%) redo procedures and 90 (72.5%) bilateral internal mammary artery (IMA) grafts. The reasons for using a FIMA were: too short an internal mammary artery pedicle in 83 patients, IMA injury at harvesting in 30 patients and post-bypass ischaemia in areas grafted with pedicled IMA (PIMA) in 11 patients. Cardiopulmonary bypass, moderate hypothermia (30 °C) and crystalloid anterograde and retrograde cardioplegia were used in all cases. Sixty-seven FIMA grafts were anastomosed directly to the ascending aorta; 57 were sutured via a saphenous hood using a running suture of polypropylene 7/0 and three were anastomosed end-to-end to a PIMA graft. FIMA grafts were directed to the left anterior descending (34%), the circumflex (37%) and the right coronary artery (29%). In total, 179 anastomoses were constructed using 127 FIMA, 136 using PIMA and 158 using saphenous veins (3.8 anastomoses per patient). Hospital mortality and postoperative myocardial infarction rates were 5.6% (seven patients) and 3.2% (four patients), respectively. Cardiac-related mortality was 3.2% (four patients); three of these four patients had been operated on for evolving infarction and one underwent a redo procedure. Four of the 117 survivors died later on; in two, it was cardiac-related and a result of global heart failure at 9 and 12 months. Of the 113 remaining patients, 106 are symptom free after a mean follow-up of 28.2 (range 3–84) months. Fifty-nine patients (50.4%) were restudied by angiography at a mean interval of 15 months. Patency rates of FIMA anastomosed either directly to the aorta or via a saphenous hood were 82.8 or 89.7%, respectively. Patency rates of FIMA directed to the left anterior descending, the circumflex and the right coronary artery were 85.7, 88 and 83.3%, respectively. Global FIMA patency was 86.4%, while global PIMA patency was 100%. The FIMA mid-term patency rates compare unfavourably with those of PIMA: FIMA should therefore be restricted to the cases where PIMA or other pedicled arterial grafts are unavailable.