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Obesity ups risk of complication after heart surgery

HeartNov 15, 05

Obesity is an important risk factor for the development of an irregular heart beat called atrial fibrillation (AF) following cardiac surgery, according to a report published online Monday.

This is the first study to find a strong and independent link between excess body weight and the development of AF, a common and potentially fatal heart rhythm abnormality, study investigators say.

“We were surprised by the increasing magnitude of AF incidence as levels of obesity increased,” Dr. Robert H. Habib, from St. Vincent Mercy Medical Center in Toledo, Ohio, who was involved in the study, told Reuters Health.

In AF, the heart’s two small upper chambers, called atria, quiver rather than beat effectively. As a result, blood is not pumped completely out of the heart. As a result, it may pool and form clots, raising the risk of stroke.

Obesity is increasingly common among patients having heart surgery. Obesity has been linked to AF in nonsurgical patient populations, but whether it increased the odds of “new-onset” AF after cardiac surgery was not known.

Habib’s team examined the records of 8,051 consecutive patients—3,164 of whom were obese—who underwent cardiac surgery at two hospitals between 1994 and 2004. The subjects were AF-free before surgery.

Overall, 22.5 percent of the patients developed AF after surgery. In analyses adjusting for age and the presence of other factors known to increase the risk of AF, researchers found that the risk of AF increased as body weight increased.

Relative to normal weight, the elevated risk of AF ranged from 18 percent for overweight subjects to 139 percent for the most obese patients (BMI > 40).

Other risk factors for postoperative AF included increasing age, mitral or aortic valve surgery, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, male gender, use of beta-blockers before surgery, vascular disease, white race, and low ejection fraction—a measure of the heart’s pumping ability.

Because cardiac surgery is often performed on an acute basis, there usually is not enough time for obese patients to lose substantial amounts of weight before surgery, Habib explained. Therefore, other measures are needed to cut the risk of postoperative AF in obese patients.

One such measure may be to perform cardiac surgery “off pump” instead of “on-pump.” In the current study, patients who had cardiac surgery “off-pump”—in which the heart continues to beat during surgery—were 39 percent less likely to develop AF than those who had the standard “on-pump” surgery in which the heart is stopped and the blood is temporarily pumped by a machine.

SOURCE: Circulation November 14, 2005.



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