Prior to the beginning of the procedure, your surgeon will discuss
with you the risks and potential complications of
coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. Make
certain that you understand these risks before you consent to the
procedure.
Your risks can be different than the risks for somebody else, based
on your current health status. For otherwise healthy individuals, the CABG
procedure is a reasonably common and uncomplicated procedure. However, certain
risks are associated with all invasive surgeries, including CABG surgery, and
are higher if you have other medical conditions.
Understanding the risks
Your surgeon will discuss these risks during your first visit, well
before your CABG takes place. Your surgeon will also describe specific
complications that might arise. He or she will review this information with you
again on the day of your CABG procedure. If you have any questions at either of
these meetings or while you are at home resting before the procedure, make sure
to ask your surgeon for clarification.
To make sure that you understand these risks, your surgeon will
probably ask you to sign a waiver (an informed consent form) that lists these
potential risks and complications in writing.
Infection
Because bacteria are naturally present in the air and on
your skin, you will always be at risk of infection whenever internal
organs or tissues are exposed to the air. That is why even small cuts can
sometimes become red and sore.
Despite the fact that sterilized equipment will be used during your
CABG procedure, there is a risk of developing an infection in any of your
wounds or incisions (namely, on your chest and legs or arms). You are also
susceptible to pneumonia.
Other medical conditions and risk of
infection
Your chances of developing an infection increase significantly if
you have several other medical conditions at the time you have CABG. In
general, these conditions weaken your immune system, which fights off
infections in your body. Examples of such conditions are:
- Severe lung disease. This underlying condition
weakens your lungs, making them more susceptible to
pneumonia.
- AIDS. HIV and AIDS decrease the strength of your immune
system.
- Old age. It has long been observed that your immune system
deteriorates with age.
- Radiation to the chest. Radiation not only
weakens your immune system but also damages muscle, bone, and tissue within the
chest, making it more open to infection.
- Reoperation. Second and
third surgeries often aggravate the same sets of tissues, leaving them weakened
and more prone to infection.
- Diabetes. Poorly controlled diabetes
can increase the risk of infection.
Superficial bleeding
After surgery, most people bleed from their incisions the same way
they would from any cut. Since your chest incision from a CABG procedure is
large, you are likely to have quite a bit of bleeding there, as well as some
bleeding from your arm or leg incisions.
Internal bleeding
Excessive internal bleeding is a relatively uncommon complication of
CABG. There are two types of internal blood loss:
- A hematoma, or bruise, is a small loss of blood
that tends to pool near the skin. A hematoma happens when there is a tear in a
small blood vessel. It can be self-contained and not dangerous, or it could be
more severe and require surgery.
- A hemorrhage is significant blood
loss that occurs when a large blood vessel like the aorta (the main artery
carrying blood out of your heart) tears. This is a very serious problem that
can happen either during or after surgery and requires emergency
attention.
Blood flow problems
- Red blood cells. Red
blood cells carry oxygen to all parts of your body. Red blood cells passing
through the heart-lung bypass machine during CABG surgery can be damaged or
deformed, reducing the number of normal red blood cells available for the
delivery of oxygen to the body.
- Plaque
rupture. Your surgeon will manipulate your aorta or coronary arteries
during the CABG procedure. Sometimes this causes a small piece of the plaque
inside your aorta or arteries to break off and move through your bloodstream.
The plaque fragment eventually lodges in a smaller blood vessel in another part
of your body, possibly blocking blood flow and oxygen.
- Blood clots. Blood clots can also develop during CABG surgery.
These clots form because blood is circulated though your body using a bypass
machine while you're lying still for hours of surgery. Your circulation slows
down while you are on bypass, allowing blood cells to stick together. A blood
clot can also get stuck in a smaller blood vessel and result in a blockage.
Such an obstruction can occur in any part of your body.
- Brain: If the obstruction occurs in a blood
vessel supplying blood to the brain, it results in a
stroke. Between 10% and 30% of people have persistent
cognitive impairment 3 to 6 months after CABG surgery, probably due to multiple
microscopic strokes that occur during surgery.1
- Organs: If a blood vessel supplying blood to one
of your organs becomes obstructed, serious problems can occur. For example,
blocked blood flow to a kidney can cause high blood pressure (renal
hypertension) and kidney damage.
- Extremities: An obstruction can
block blood flow to one of your extremities, causing damage to fingertips or
toes.
Serious complications that can occur during a CABG procedure
During CABG surgery, your heart is stopped, surgery is done to form
bypasses, and then your heart is started again. These steps can cause problems
for your heart, including:
- Heart attack. If a piece of loose plaque or a blood
clot blocks the blood flow in one of your coronary arteries, it will cause a
heart attack. This is a severe complication that requires immediate
intervention.
- Irregular heart rhythms. Your heart is stopped
during a standard CABG surgery. When it is restarted, it may develop an
abnormal rhythm. Most often, the abnormal rhythm is postoperative atrial
fibrillation and will resolve with medications and time.
Given the degree of invasiveness, CABG surgery is a relatively safe
operation. However, death can still occur during CABG surgery, typically as a
result of a heart attack or some other cardiac complication.
In rare instances, an allergy to a medication or an inadvertent
tearing of the aorta during surgery may also cause death.
Research suggests that patients with the highest risk of dying
during CABG surgery are those with heart failure. Heart failure is a condition
where the left ventricle (the heart chamber that pumps blood out to the body)
is already functioning poorly before the surgery.
Other factors that increase your risk of death during and after a
CABG operation are:
- The presence of other medical problems such as
lung disease, liver failure, or kidney failure.
- Old age. As the
body ages, it is less able to prevent potentially life-threatening infections
after surgery.
- Surgical inexperience. An experienced surgical team
may be better at dealing with unexpected complications during surgery.
Final thoughts
Overall, the risks associated with CABG surgery are relatively small.
Persons with other medical conditions, particularly heart and lung conditions,
face a greater risk of death and complications during bypass surgery.
Regardless of your health status, you should educate yourself about the
potential complications of CABG surgery and talk with your doctors about your
personal risk.