When Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery Is Your Best Option

When is Bypass Surgery the Best Treatment?

The medical literature and my own experience support this course of action in symptomatic patients with known coronary artery disease:

  • If you have only one or two blockages (unless it includes a “Left Main Lesion”) and a good heart function , a Stent is usually the best option;
  • If you have three or more blockages, a “Left Main”, damage to your heart, or are a Diabetic, you are usually better off with a CABG.
  • There are important exceptions to these recommendations, but they should be dictated by your condition, nor by what is best for your doctor!

Unstable Angina Pectoris (UAP) is a dangerous condition caused by the presence of Coronary Artery Disease (CAD), the result of Atherosclerosis and a number of factors. Whatever the cause, blockages in your arteries critically reduce the flow of oxygen rich blood to some parts of your heart. Remember, your heart is the motor in your body and needs fuel to perform just like the motor in your car. Nothing else will work if your heart doesn’t.

UAP is usually associated with chest pains and/or other symptoms that can be very confusing. Sometimes patients cannot tell whether they are in the middle of heart attack or whether this is just a warning.

The first thing your doctors will try to do is stabilize your condition, determine whether there has been any damage and if so, minimize the extent of the injury and identify the parts of your heart that are not getting enough blood. This then leads to finding where and how many blockages you have in your arteries.

Low level Angina: Symptoms that occur with certain activities and disappear with rest. Chest pains caused by angina is the heart’s response to insufficient blood supply caused by CAD. It is a warning signal that there is not enough blood flow for the needs of that moment. A person with narrowed arteries may develop angina during any activity that increases the heart’s demand for blood beyond the available supply.

Atypical Symptoms: Sometimes (especially in women) the symptoms may include classic symptoms such as shortness of breath, nausea and vomiting – but may also include several less classic symptoms including fatigue, dizziness and palpitations.

Dangerous BlockagesMost patients with three-vessels disease or Left Main CAD stenosis.

Cardiac Catherization is the standard procedure that determines what the road map is for fixing the blood supply (although CT Coronary Angiography  CTCA may some day replace it as the quickest and simplest way). Once known, the blockages can be treated with two procedures, “Stents” (PCI) or bypass surgery (CABG).

Bypass surgery solves the issue by going around the area of obstruction, basically creating a new pathway, Stents try to stretch the blockages and improve the blood supply that way.

There are important advantages associated with each procedure, but also equally important disadvantages. The reason this website was created in the first place is to put these issues in their proper perspective and to empower you, the patient, to make informed decisions about your own care.

People are interested in quick fixes and often forget that equally important, after the acute event what matters most is what happens in the long run. This why it is so important to remember that neither PCI nor CABG treat Atherosclerosis, the cause of CAD. However, of the two procedures, PCI is more like the quick fix, CABG the long distance runner.

Diet, exercise, medications and other life style modifications can slow down or stop this disease process. Don’t make the mistake of going back to your old ways like so many patients do, particularly after a successful intervention,  when most patients are left alone:

If you have Coronary Artery Disease that requires treatment this questionnaire will help you find your optimal treatment.

Cardiac Rehab is expensive, requires lots of supervision by doctors, nurses, physical therapists, dieticians and above all, a long term commitment from you, the patient. I believe strongly that interventions play an important but limited role. If there is to be any long term impact, it has to come from prevention  and long term control (same thing, diet, exercise, healthy life style).

As a surgeon, I spent my career fixing patients in sometimes desperate situations and it was very frustrating to see my “successes” happily go back to their old ways once recovered. The role of doctors is no longer to stand by and observe, or to just do “procedures” as the primary action, but to help patients over the course of a lifetime. Health policies should reflect this because ultimately, it is the cheapest solution!

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