TY - BOOK AU - Ahmed Mahmoud Fakhry Abdelhamid AU - Hesham Zayed Saleh , AU - Walid Gamal Eldin AbouSenna , AU - Yahia Balbaa Anwar Balbaa , TI - Timing of coronary artery bypass grafting surgery after acute myocardial infarction / PY - 2016/// CY - Cairo : PB - Ahmed Mahmoud Fakhry Abdelhamid , KW - Acute myocardial infarction KW - Coronary artery bypass grafting KW - Timing N1 - Thesis (Ph.D.) - Cairo University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery; Issued also as CD N2 - Background: Optimal timing for CABG surgery after myocardial infarction (MI) remains controversial. The aim of our study was to analyze the effect of timing of CABG after acute MI on operative mortality and morbidity. Methods: This prospective study included 60 patients who underwent isolated CABG within 30 days of acute MI over 20 months (from the first of November 2014 till the end of June 2016) in Kasr Alainy university hospitals. Patients were divided into two groups; the early group (0-3 days) included 14 patients (23.3%) and the late group (4-30 days) included 46 patients (76.7%). The primary outcome was all-cause hospital mortality. Results: Our study included 43 males (71.7%) and 17 females (28.3%). The mean age was 58.4±7.3 years. The total mortality rate was 8.3%. Patients undergoing early CABG experienced a higher mortality rate than those undergoing late CABG (21.4% vs 4.3%, P=0.043). Also, early CABG was associated with more postoperative complications. Cardiogenic shock and early CABG were independent risk factors of mortality. Conclusion: CABG in the first 3 days after acute MI was associated with high mortality and morbidity in comparison with late CABG. This suggests that CABG may best be deferred for more than 3 days after acute MI in non-urgent cases ER -