Meeting Program - Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists

Transcription

Meeting Program - Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists
Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists
Photo courtesy of Tourism Vancouver
Society of
Cardiovascular
Anesthesiologists
30th Annual Meeting
& Workshops
June 18 – 22, 2008
Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • Officers
Christina Mora Mangano, MD
President
Steven N. Konstadt, MD
President-Elect
Solomon Aronson, MD
Secretary-Treasurer
James G. Ramsay, MD
Past-President
Board of Directors
George E. Burgess, III, MD
Albert T. Cheung, MD
Gregg S. Hartman, MD
Robert J. Marino, M.D.
C. David Mazer, MD
David L. Reich, MD
Jack S. Shanewise, MD
Stanton K. Shernan, MD
Linda Shore-Lesserson, MD
Robert N. Sladen, MD
Scientific Program Committee
Scott T. Reeves, MD
Scientific Program
Committee Chair
Scott T. Reeves, MD, Chair
David A. Zvara, MD, Vice Chair
Colleen G. Koch, MD, Coordinator
of Workshops & PBLDs
François Beique, MD
Mary Beth Brady, MD
Albert T. Cheung, MD
R. Lebron Cooper, MD
Brian Donohue, MD, PhD
Benjamin Drenger, MD
• SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
David A. Zvara, MD
Scientific Program
Committee Vice Chair
Colleen G. Koch, MD, FACC
Coordinator of Workshops
& PBLDs
Amanda Fox, MD
Kathryn E. Glas, MD
A. Stephane Lambert, MD
Andrew D. Maslow, MD
C. David Mazer, MD
Joseph Miller, MD
Kent H. Rehfeldt, MD
Kathryn Rouine-Rapp, MD
David Royston, MBChB
Nikolaos J. Skubas, MD
Claudia Spies, MD
Marc E. Stone, MD
Madhav Swaminathan, MD
Junzo Takeda, MD
Katja Turner, MD
Michael H. Wall, MD
Hilary Grocott, MD (ad hoc)
Charles Hogue, MD (ad hoc)
John Butterworth, MD (ad hoc)
Leanne Groban, MD (ad hoc)
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
June 18 - 22, 2008 • Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre • Vancouver, BC, Canada
GENERAL INFORMATION
Target Audience
Cardiothoracic anesthesiologists, critical care physicians, general anesthesiologists, nurses, perfusionists and other allied health personnel, epidemiologists/researchers and all
those involved in the care of the cardiovascular surgery patient will benefit from attendance at this meeting.
Statement of Need
The field of cardiovascular anesthesiology is a dynamic specialty that changes as modern cardiovascular medicine changes. New additions to the armamentarium of cardiovascular medicine include percutaneous interventions, valvular heart surgery, minimally invasive techniques, heart failure devices, electrophysiologic interventions, and the changing
status of cardiac surgery. Current practitioners in cardiovascular anesthesiology demand an educational course that is current and up to date with cardiology and cardiac surgical
advances. The Annual Meeting provides this educational tool. The Annual Meeting provides teaching of intraoperative echocardiography for management of patients undergoing
various cardiac surgical procedures. Also provided are workshops in cardiopulmonary bypass and heart failure. Multidisciplinary faculty with excellent evaluations from attendees
are included in the faculty. Interactive workshops and discussion sessions with the experts center on patient-oriented educational programs to teach the requisite skills and
concepts necessary for advanced care of these patients. This interdisciplinary program sponsored and offered by the SCA for its members has been developed to meet the growing demand for such educational needs.
Workshops
Fee includes workshop, continental breakfast (morning workshops), coffee breaks and syllabus.
CME Accreditation: The Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical
education for physicians.
Designation: The Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists designates this educational activity for a maximum of 4 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should only
claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Registration Limitations: Please note limitations. Pre-registration of workshops and evening sessions is available to SCA Members only. If space is available, sessions will be
opened to non-members on site.
30th Annual Meeting
Location: All scientific sessions, workshops and PBLDs will be held at the Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre.
Fee includes continental breakfasts, coffee breaks, (2) lunches, (1) reception and the meeting syllabus.
CME Accreditation: The Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical
education for physicians.
Designation: The Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists designates this educational activity for a maximum of 29.5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should only
claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Refund Policy
For the Workshops, Evening Sessions, Annual Meeting, PBLDs, and guest fee a full refund will be provided through May 8, 2008; an 80% refund will be provided from May 9, 2008
through June 5, 2008. After June 5, 2008, the Society will not refund any registration fees. Refunds will be determined by the date the written cancellation is received in the SCA’s
headquarters.
Americans With Disabilities Act
The Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists has fully complied with the legal requirements of the ADA and the rules and regulations thereof. If any participant in this educational activity is in need of accommodations, please contact SCA at (804) 282-0084 by June 5, 2008 in order to receive service.
Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre, Vancouver, BC, Canada
All scientific sessions will take place at the Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre.
200-999 Canada Place
Vancouver, BC, Canada
(604) 647-7390
http://www.vcec.ca/
Hotels
The Fairmont Waterfront: www.fairmont.com/waterfront/
Pan Pacific Vancouver Hotel: www.panpacific.com/Vancouver/Overview.html
IMPORTANT TRAVEL INFORMATION: Passports will be required for U.S. citizens who travel to Canada in 2008. Travelers from all other countries should check with their individual governments for travel requirements and documentation.
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshop Faculty
Martin Abel, MBBCh
Professor of Anesthesiology
Mayo Clinic College of Medicine
Rochester, MN
Rebecca L. Cain, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Medical University of South Carolina
Charleston, SC
John E. Ellis, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
University of Chicago
Chicago, IL
Christopher J. Jankowski, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Mayo Clinic College of Medicine
Rochester, MN
Jake Abernathy, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Medical University of South Carolina
Charleston, SC
Javier Campos, MD
Vice Chair for Clinical Affairs
Director of Cardiothoracic Anesthesia
University of Iowa
Iowa City, IA
Nauder Faraday, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Johns Hopkins Medical Institution
Baltimore, MD
David Kaemmer, CCP
Senior Perfusionist
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC
Amanda Fox, MD
Staff Anesthesiologist
Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Boston, MA
Marc Kanchuger, MD
Chief, Cardiothoracic and
Transplant Anesthesia
NYU School of Medicine
New York, NY
Shamsuddin Akhtar, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Director of Medical Studies
Yale University School of Medicine
New Haven, CT
Michael Andritsos, MD
Assistant Professor
Ohio State University
Columbus, OH
David Ansley, MD
Clinical Professor
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Solomon Aronson, MD
Vice Chair of Anesthesiology
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC
Michael Avidan, MD
Associate Professor
Washington University
St. Louis, MO
Steven Barker, PhD, MD
Professor
University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ
François Beique, MD, FRCPC
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
McGill University
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Ian Black, MD
Associate Program Director, Anesthesia Critical
Care, San Antonio Military Medical Center
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology, Uniformed
Services University of the Health Services
San Antonio, TX
Steven F. Bolling, MD
Professor of Surgery
Adult Cardiac Surgery, Cardiovascular Center
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI
Mary Beth Brady, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Director of Intraoperative TEE
Johns Hopkins Medical Institution
Baltimore, MD
Thomas Burch, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Children’s Hospital Boston
Boston, MA
John Butterworth, IV, MD
R.K. Stoelting Professor and Chairman
Indiana University School of Medicine
Indianapolis, IN
Michael Byas-Smith, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Emory University School of Medicine
Atlanta, GA
Cedric Carter, MB, BS, MRCP
Associate Professor, Department of Pathology
and Laboratory Medicine
Vancouver General Hospital
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Frandics Chan, MD
Assistant Professor of Radiology
Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital
Stanford, CA
Mark Chaney, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Director of Cardiac Anesthesia
University of Chicago
Chicago, IL
Davy Cheng, MD, MSc, FRCPC
Chair of Anesthesiology & Perioperative Medicine
University Hospital of Western Ontario
London, Ontario, Canada
Albert T. Cheung, MD
Professor of Anesthesia and Critical Care
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA
Edmond Cohen, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Mount Sinai Medical Center
New York, NY
Neal Cohen, MD
Professor of Anesthesia and Medicine
UCSF School of Medicine
San Francisco, CA
R. Lebron Cooper, MD
Vice Chair of Anesthesiology for Clinical Operations
Ochsner Clinic Foundation
New Orleans, LA
James DiNardo, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesia
Harvard Medical School
Boston, MA
George Djaiani, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesia
Toronto General Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Brian S. Donahue, MD, PhD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital
Nashville, TN
Susan Garwood, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Yale University School of Medicine
New Haven, CT
Kathryn Glas, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Emory University School of Medicine
Atlanta, GA
Glenn P. Gravlee, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
University of Colorado at Denver
Denver, CO
William J. Greeley, MD, MBA
Professor and Chair of Anesthesiology
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, PA
Katherine P. Grichnik, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC
Hilary Grocott, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
University of Manitoba
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Gershon Growe, MD
Clinical Professor
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC, Canada
Gregg S. Hartman, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
Lebanon, NH
Lori B. Heller, MD
Acting Instructor
Swedish Hospital
Staff Anesthesiologist
University of Washington
Seattle, WA
Steven E. Hill, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC
Benjamin Drenger, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Hadassah University Hospital
Jerusalem, Israel
Charles Hogue, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology & Critical
Care Medicine
Johns Hopkins Medical Institution
Baltimore, MD
Thomas Ebert, MD, PHD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Medical College of Wisconsin
Milwaukee, WI
Helen Holtby, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
• SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
Keyvan Karkouti, MD
Associate Professor
Toronto General Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Brian P. Kavanagh, MD
Chair, Department of Anesthesia
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Judy Kersten, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology, Pharmacology &
Toxicology
Medical College of Wisconsin
Milwaukee, WI
Merril L. Knudtson, MD, FRCPC
Professor of Medicine
University of Calgary, Foothills Hospital
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Colleen G. Koch, MD, MS, FACC
Staff Physician
Department of CT Anesthesia
Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Cleveland, OH
Benjamin Kohl, MD
Assistant Professor
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA
Steven Konstadt, MD
Chairman and Professor of Anesthesiology
Maimonides Medical Center
Brooklyn, NY
Garrett Kovarik, MD
Assistant Professor
McGill University
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Yoan Lamarche, MD, MSc, FRCSC
Cardiac Surgery
Montreal Heart Institute
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
A. Stephane Lambert, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesia
University of Ottawa Heart Institute
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Jerrold Levy, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Deputy Chair, Research
Emory University School of Medicine
Atlanta, GA
Martin London, MD
Professor of Clinical Anesthesia
University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco, CA
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshop Faculty
Feroze Mahmood, MD
Instructor in Anesthesia
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Boston, MA
Andrew Maslow, MD
Associate Clinical Professor of Anesthesiology
Brown Medical School
Providence, RI
Idit Matot, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Chairman, Department of Anesthesiology and
Critical Care
Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center
Tel Aviv University, Israel
C. David Mazer, MD
Professor and Vice Chair for Research
Department of Anesthesia
St. Michael’s Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Nutan Mehta, MD
Chief of Cardiothoracic Anesthesia
St. Francis Hospital
Wilmington, DE
Joseph P. Miller, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesia
Uniformed Services University
Olympia, WA
Alexander Mittnacht, MD
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
New York, NY
Donald Oxorn, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology & Medicine (Cardiology)
University of Washington
Seattle, WA
Peter J. Panzica, MD
Vice Chairman of Anesthesia
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Boston, MA
Ronald G. Pearl, MD, PhD
Professor and Chairman of Anesthesiology
Stanford University Medical Center
Stanford, CA
Wanda Popescu, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Yale University School of Medicine
New Haven, CT
Kenneth Shann, CCP
Associate Director, Perfusion Services
Montefiore Medical Center
Bronx, NY
Harish Ramakrishna, MD
Director of Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology
Mayo Clinic Arizona
Phoenix, AZ
Andrew Shaw, MD, FRCA
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC
Chandra Ramamoorthy, MB, BS
Associate Professor
Director of Pediatric Cardiac Anesthesiology
Stanford University Medical Center
Stanford, CA
Stanton K. Shernan, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Boston, MA
Emad B. Mossad, MD
Director of Pediatric Cardiac Anesthesia
Texas Children’s Hospital
Houston, TX
Kent H. Rehfeldt, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Mayo Clinic College of Medicine
Rochester, MN
Glenn S. Murphy, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Northwestern University School of Medicine
Chicago, IL
David L. Reich, MD
Horace W. Goldsmith Professor and Chair
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
New York, NY
Bryant A. Murphy, MD
Cumberland Anesthesia Associates
Cape Fear Valley Medical Center
Fayetteville, NC
Paul Reynolds, MD
Uma and Sujit Pandit Professor and
Chief of Pediatric Anesthesiology
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI
Gregory A. Nuttall, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Mayo Clinic College of Medicine
Rochester, MN
Christopher O’Connor, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Rush University Medical Center
Chicago, IL
E. Andrew Ochroch, MD
Associate Professor
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA
Robert M. Savage, MD
Head, Section of Perioperative Imaging
Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Cleveland, OH
Jack S. Shanewise, MD, FASE
Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology
Columbia University College of Physicians
& Surgeons
New York, NY
Christina T. Mora Mangano, MD
Professor and Chief, Cardiovascular Anesthesiology
Stanford University
Stanford, CA
Nancy A. Nussmeier, MD
Professor and Chair of Anesthesiology
SUNY Upstate Medical University
Syracuse, NY
David S. Rubenson, MD
Director, Cardiac Non-Invasive Laboratory
Scripps Clinic Medical Group
San Diego, CA
Albert C. Perrino, Jr., MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Yale University School of Medicine
New Haven, CT
Scott Reeves, MD
Professor and Chair, Anesthesia & Perioperative
Medicine
Medical University of South Carolina
Charleston, SC
Paul S. Myles, MBBS
Professor and Director
Alfred Hospital and Monash University
Melbourne Victoria, Australia
David Royston, MBCHB
Consultant Cardiothoracic Anaesthetist
Harefield Hospital
Harefield, Middlesex, United Kingdom
Rafael D. Rieves, MD
Acting Division Director
Food and Drug Administration
Silver Spring, MD
Gary Roach, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Kaiser-Permanente, San Francisco
San Francisco, CA
G. Alec Rooke, MD, PhD
Visiting Professor of Anesthesia
Harvard Medical School
Boston, MA
Kathryn Rouine-Rapp, MD
Professor of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care
University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco, CA
Douglas Shook, MD
Program Director
Cardiac Anesthesiologist
Brigham & Women’s Hospital
Boston, MA
Linda Shore-Lesserson, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Albert Einstein School of Medicine
Bronx, NY
Nikolaos J. Skubas, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Weill Medical College of Cornell University
New York, NY
Robert N. Sladen, MD, MBChB
Professor and Vice Chair of Anesthesiology
Columbia University
New York, NY
Thomas F. Slaughter, MD
Professor and Section Chief of Cardiothoracic
Anesthesiology
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
Winston Salem, NC
Peter D. Slinger, MD
Professor of Anesthesia
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Brian C. Spence, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
Lebanon, NH
Bruce D. Spiess, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology & Emergency Medicine
Director, VCURES
Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center
Richmond, VA
Mark Stafford-Smith, MD
Professor of Anesthesiology
Director, Fellowship Education
and Cardiothoracic Anesthesia
& Critical Care Medicine Fellowship
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC
Marc E. Stone, MD
Assistant Professor or Anesthesiology
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
New York, NY
Erin A. Sullivan, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA
Sugantha Sundar, MD
Instructor
Harvard Medical School
Boston, MA
Madhav Swaminathan, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC
Junzo Takeda, MD
Professor & Chairman of Anesthesiology
School of Medicine, Keio University
Tokyo, Japan
Jason Taylor, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Medical University of South Carolina
Charleston, SC
Daniel M. Thys, MD
Professor and Chair of Anesthesiology
St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center
New York, NY
Claude P. Tousignant, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesia
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Katja R. Turner, MD
Assistant Professor - Clinical
Ohio State University
Columbus, OH
Joyce A. Wahr, MD
Consultant
Clinical Strategies
Minnetonka, MN
Michael H. Wall, MD, FCCM
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
and Surgery
Washington University School of Medicine
St. Louis, MO
Stuart Weiss, MD
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA
William S. Whitley, MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Emory University School of Medicine
Atlanta, GA
David A. Zvara, MD
Professor and Chairman of Anesthesiology
Ohio State University
Columbus, OH
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • SCA 30th Annual Meeting Program
TUESDAY, June 17, 2008
3:00-6:00 pm
= Fellow Track
Registration
WEDNESDAY, June 18, 2008 • For workshop details, see pages 12 and 13.
6:30 am-5:30 pm
7:00-8:00 am
8:00 am-12:00 pm
Registration
Continental Breakfast
REFRESHER COURSE LECTURES
Moderator: Scott Reeves, MD
8:00-8:35 am
RC #1 Ischemic Preconditioning: Where are we after 10 years?
Judy Kersten, MD
8:40-9:15 am
RC #2 Cardiopulmonary Bypass Catastrophes: When seconds count
Glenn Gravlee, MD
9:20-9:55 am
RC #3 Anesthesia On The Frontline: Lessons learned from Iraq
Ian Black, MD
9:55-10:15 am
Coffee Break
10:15-10:50 am
RC #4 Thrilla In Manila, The Aprotinin Controversy Continues
C. David Mazer, MD
10:55-11:30 am
RC #5 Renal Failure After Cardiothoracic Surgery
Mark Stafford-Smith, MD
11:30 am-12 pm
RC #6 Pharmacoepidemilogy of Cardioprotective Medications: Implications for the Clinician
Martin London, MD
8:00-10:00 am
8:00-9:55 am
9:55-10:15 am
WORKSHOP 1: Leveraging Your TEE Knowledge in the OR
Moderators: Mary Beth Brady, MD/Joseph Miller, MD
WORKSHOP 2: Hands-on Thoracic ANESTHESIA
Moderators: R. Lebron Cooper, MD/Edmond Cohen, MD
Coffee Break
10:15 am-12:15 pm
WORKSHOP 3: TEE – New and Review
Moderator: Kent Rehfeldt, MD
10:15 am-12:15 pm
WORKSHOP 4: Adults with Congenital Heart Disease: Arrhythmias, Sequelae and Recent
Advances in non-Surgical Management
Moderators: Kathryn Rouine-Rapp, MD/Chandra Ramamoorthy, MB, BS
12:15-1:30 pm
Lunch on own
1:00-4:00 pm
WORKSHOP 5: HANDHELD ULTRASOUND
Moderators: Kathryn Glas, MD/François Beique, MD, FRCPC
1:00-4:00 pm
WORKSHOP 6: Essentials of CPB
Moderator: Madhav Swaminathan, MD, FASE
1:30-2:45 pm
FOCUS Update
Moderators: Bruce Spiess, MD/Scott Reeves, MD
2:45-3:00 pm
Coffee Break
1:45-3:45 pm
Poster Discussion I
1:45-3:45 pm
Poster Discussion II
3:00-4:00 pm
Expert Review of Best Abstracts
Moderator: Martin London, MD
4:00-5:30 pm
Complex Case Presentations in Cardiovascular Anesthesiology
Moderator: Christina Mora Mangano, MD
4:15-7:15 pm
WORKSHOP 7: TEE AdvanceD Clinical Cases
Moderators: Nikolaos Skubas, MD/Kent Rehfeldt, MD
• SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
SCA 30th Annual Meeting Program
THURSDAY, June 19, 2008
6:15 am-5:30 pm
Registration
6:45-8:00 am
Problem Based Learning Discussions
Separate registration required. Please see page 33.
7:00-8:00 am
Continental Breakfast
8:00-10:45 am
= Fellow Track
Evidence-Based Practice
Moderator: C. David Mazer, MD
Evidence-based Cardiology Interventions (stent update)
Merril L. Knudtson, MD
Evidence-based Perfusion Practice
Kenneth Shann, CCP
Evidence-based Transfusion Practice
Colleen Koch, MD, FACC
Evidence-based Monitoring
Hilary Grocott, MD
10:45-11:00 am
11:00 am-12:00 pm
Coffee Break
Session A: Professional Development: When patient care is the easy part
Moderator: David Zvara, MD
Dealing with the Disruptive Colleague: Record-keeping, counseling and steps to dismissal
Steven J Barker, PhD, MD
Narcotic and Substance Abuse in Clinical Practice: How to recognize it and what to do about it
Katja Turner, MD
Session B: DHCA - Strategies to Improve Outcomes after Deep Hypothermic
Circulatory Arrest
Moderator: Albert T. Cheung, MD
Evidence-based on Clinical Studies
David Reich, MD
Evidence-based on Experimental Studies
William Greeley, MD, MBA
12:00-1:30 pm
1:30-3:30 pm
Lunch on Own
Session A: Contemporary Management of the Thoracic Surgical Patient
Moderator: Katja Turner, MD
Review of Respiratory Physiology: Remembering what we forgot
Stuart Weiss, MD
Acute Lung Injury and ARDS After Lung Resection: Is aggressive fluid restriction the answer?
Robert Sladen, MD
2008 Update on Lung Transplantation
Erin Sullivan, MD
>>>>>> Continued on page 8
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • SCA 30th Annual Meeting Program
1:30-3:30 pm
Session B: CCAS/SCA JOINT SESSION – Adults with Congenital Heart Disease: Overview,
non-Echocardiographic Imaging and the Pregnant Patient
Moderators: Kathryn Rouine-Rapp, MD/Chandra Ramamoorthy, MB, BS
Overview of CHD
Helen Holtby, MD
Non-Echocardiographic Imaging Technologies
Frandics Chan, MD
The Pregnant Patient with a Single Ventricle
Sugantha Sundar, MD
Session C: Poster Discussion III
3:30-4:15 pm
Coffee Break and Opening of Exhibits
4:15-5:30 pm
Session A: Gender Issues in Cardiovascular Medicine: Why can’t women
be more like men?
Moderator: Mary Beth Brady, MD
The Preoperative Profile – It’s a boy! It’s a girl! Does it really make a difference?
Susan Garwood, MD
Surgical Outcomes – Is there a difference? Why?
Nancy Nussmeier, MD
Perioperative Implications of Estrogen Replacement
Charles Hogue, MD
Session B: Pharmacology: Novel Pharmacology for Cardiac Anesthesia
Moderators: Amanda Fox, MD/Junzo Takeda, MD
Propofol for Myocardial Protection: What is the evidence?
David Ansley, MD
Treating Perioperative Pulmonary Hypertension with Inhaled Milrinone or Prostacyclin: Does it work?
Yoan Lamarche, MD, MSc, FRCSC
Pros and Cons of Perioperative ACE-Inhibitor and Angiotensin Receptor Blocker Use with Cardiovascular Surgery
John Butterworth IV, MD
Session C: Crazy Stuff and Wild Times
Moderator: Kent Rehfeldt, MD
OPCAB Revisited: Is there really any benefit?
Davy Cheng, MD
Coronary Stents: Are we going back to bare-metal?
Harish Ramakrishna, MD
Percutaneous Aortic Valve Replacement: Is this the way of the future or the way out future?
Robert Savage, MD
FRIDAY, June 20, 2008
6:15 am-5:30 pm
Registration
6:45-8:00 am
Problem Based Learning Discussions
Separate registration required. Please see page 33 for details.
7:00-8:00 am
Continental Breakfast
= Fellow Track
• SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
SCA 30th Annual Meeting Program
8:00-10:15 am
Monograph Session: Medically Challenging Patients Undergoing
Cardiothoracic Surgery
Moderator: Neal Cohen, MD
Airway Challenges in the Patient Who Requires Lung Isolation
Peter Slinger, MD
= Fellow Track
Managing the Patient with an Anterior Mediastinal Mass
Javier Campos, MD
Cardiothoracic Surgery in the Morbidly Obese Patient
Thomas Ebert, MD, PhD
The Jehovah`s Witness Requiring Cardiothoracic Surgery
Steven Hill, MD
10:15-11:00 am
11:00 am-12:00 pm
Coffee Break with Exhibitors
Keynote Speaker
12:00-12:30 pm
Business Meeting
12:30-1:30 pm
Lunch with Exhibitors and Posters
1:30-3:30 pm
Session A: Contemporary Issues in Vascular Surgery
Moderator: Brian Donahue, MD, PhD
Anesthesia and the Endovascular Stenting Patient
Michael Andritsos, MD
Carotid Disease and CABG: Recent data on surgical timing and outcome
John Ellis, MD
Evidence-based Perioperative Evaluation in Vascular Surgery Patients
E. Andrew Ochroch, MD
The Use of Ultrasound During Vascular Anesthesia: From line placement to LV assessment
Gregg Hartman, MD
Session B: Anesthesia & Analgesia: aprotinin in cardiac surgery and the fda
Moderator: Charles Hogue, MD
Variability in Platelet Response to Aspirin: Implications for perioperative management
Nauder Faraday, MD
The Anemia Paradox: Worse outcome after cardiac surgery from both anemia and transfusion
Keyvan Karkouti, MD
The FDA and Aprotinin
Rafael D. Rieves, MD
Session C: ASCCA/SCA Joint Session – Critical Care 2008
Moderator: Michael Wall, MD, FCCM
Can Intra-Operative Ventilation Cause ARDS?
Brian Kavanagh, MB
Vasopressin and Steroids in Sepsis: Is there an answer?
Michael Avidan, MD
Best Critical Care Papers 2007-2008 for the CVT Anesthesiologist
Michael Wall, MD, FCCM
3:30-4:15 pm
Coffee Break with Exhibitors
4:15-5:30 pm
Session A: HITT
Moderators: David Royston, MBChB/Colleen Koch, MD, MS, FACC
Incidence and Methods of Presentation of HITT
Cedric Carter, MD
Clinical Management Case Discussion
Linda Shore-Lesserson, MD
Case Discussion
Jerrold Levy, MD
>>>>>> Continued on page 10
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • SCA 30th Annual Meeting Program
4:15-5:30 pm
Session: B: SAGA/SCA JOINT SESSION: Controversies in Preoperative Evaluation of the
Elderly Patient
Moderator: G. Alec Rooke, MD, PhD
Should We Pay Closer Attention to the Preoperative Hematocrit?
Gregory A. Nuttall, MD
SAGA
Should BNP be Measured in All Elderly Patients Preoperatively?
Shamsuddin Akhtar, MD
Should We Screen for Patients at Risk of Postoperative Delirium or Cognitive Decline?
Christopher Jankowski, MD
Session C: SCA Debates: Workforce Paradigms in Cardiothoracic
and Vascular Anesthesiology
Moderator: David Zvara, MD
The SCA Should Recommend Credentialing Guidelines to Hospitals for CT Anesthesiologists
Pro: Glenn Gravlee, MD/Con: Gary Roach, MD
The SCA Should Recommend that Low Volume Programs Close
Pro: Mark Chaney, MD/Con: Bryant Murphy, MD
5:30-7:00 pm
Reception in Exhibit Hall
6:00-8:00 pm
American Society of Anesthesiology Practice Guidelines for Perioperative Transesophageal Echocardiography (No CME credit awarded)
Moderators: Daniel M. Thys, MD/Scott Reeves, MD
A task force of the American Society of Anesthesiology has been meeting to revise the 1996 Practice Guidelines for Perioperative Transesophageal
Echocardiography. This session will allow the membership of the SCA to review the proposed updated guidelines and to comment to the task force
regarding specific issues raised.
SATURDAY, June 21, 2008
6:15 am-5:30 pm
Registration
6:45-8:00 am
Problem Based Learning Discussions
Separate registration required. Please see page 33.
7:00-8:00 am
Continental Breakfast
8:00-10:15 am
Ischemic MR
Moderators: A. Stephane Lambert, MD/Scott Reeves, MD
Understanding Ischemic MR
David Rubenson, MD
Intraoperative Evaluation of Ischemic MR
Stanton Shernan, MD
The Surgical Approach to Ischemic MR
Steven F. Bolling, MD
10:15-11:00 am
11:00 am-12:00 pm
Coffee Break with Exhibitors
Session A: How’s Your Sugar, Daddy?
Moderator: François Beique, MD, FRCPC
Intraoperative Glycemic Control: It just makes sense!
Pro: Benjamin Kohl, MD
Intensive Insulin Therapy During Cardiac Surgery Does Not Reduce Perioperative Death or Morbidity
Con: Martin D Abel, MBBCh
= Fellow Track
10 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
SCA 30th Annual Meeting Program
11:00 am-12:00 pm
Session B: Research: Multicenter trials and research consortia:
the whole is bigger than the sum of the parts
Moderator: Hilary Grocott, MD
The iPegasus Group
Andrew Shaw, MD, FRCA
Nuances of Perioperative Multicenter Trials
Paul Myles, MBBS
12:00-1:30 pm
1:30-3:30 pm
Lunch with Exhibitors and Posters
Session A: The Forgotten Ventricle: Understanding Right Ventricular Function
Moderators: Benjamin Drenger, MD/Marc Stone, MD
The Physiology of RV Failure
Ron Pearl, MD
TEE Assessment of Pulmonary Hypertension and RV Failure
Claude Tousignant, MD
Current Medical Management of Pulmonary Hypertension
Idit Matot, MD
Current Surgical Management of RV Failure
Marc E. Stone, MD
Session B: Hematology
Moderator: Colleen Koch, MD, MS, FACC
Issues in Blood Banking That Impact Outcomes: Leukocyte depletion, female plasma donors: What’s the data?
Gershon Growe , MD
Age of Red Cells: Does shelf life matter?
C. David Mazer, MD
Red Cell Alternatives: Are we any closer or just one day older?
Bruce Spiess, MD
Emerging Recombinant Clotting Factors: When, in whom, and how much?
Linda Shore-Lesserson, MD
Session C: Poster Discussion IV
3:30-4:15 pm
Coffee Break
4:15-5:30 pm
Echo Jeopardy
Moderators: Andrew Maslow, MD/Peter Panzica, MD/Robert Savage, MD/Feroze Mahmood, MD
Contestants: Jack Shanewise, MD/Martin London, MD/Nikolaos Skubas, MD/David Zvara, MD/Donald Oxorn, MD/Solomon Aronson, MD
6:00-9:00 pm
30th Anniversary SCA Party
SUNDAY, June 22, 2008
6:45-10:00 am
7:00-8:00 am
8:00-10:00 am
Registration
Continental Breakfast
Headaches, Heart Aches and Hangovers: A rapid fire case-based TEE conference on the images that drive us all crazy
Moderators: Andrew Maslow, MD/Albert Cheung, MD
Faculty: Albert Cheung, MD/Andrew Maslow, MD/Benjamin Kohl, MD/Rebecca Cain, MD/Lori Heller, MD/Steven Konstadt, MD
Workshop 8: handheld ultrasound (enrollment limited to 50)
Moderators: Kathryn Glas, MD/François Beique, MD, FRCPC
= Fellow Track
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 11
SCA 30th Annual Meeting Program
WORKSHOPS
WEDNESDAY, June 18, 2008
8:00-10:00 am
WORKSHOP 1: Leveraging Your TEE Knowledge in the OR
Moderators: Mary Beth Brady, MD/Joseph Miller, MD
The Upset Stomach: How and when to incorporate epicardial imaging into your practice
Jake Abernathy, MD
A Picture Is Worth A 1000 Words: Clincally relevant echocardiographic and anatomic correlations
Feroze Mahmood, MD
Quantitate Or Not To Quantitate? Appropriate use of qualitative doppler imaging in clinical practice
William Whitley, MD
Great Image…Now What?
Panel
8:00-9:55 am
WORKSHOP 2: Hands-on Thoracic anesthesia
Moderators: R. Lebron Cooper, MD/Edmond Cohen, MD
Isolation of the Lung: DLT
Javier Campos, MD
Isolation of the Lung: Univent/Blockers
Peter Slinger, MD
Epidural/Paravertebral Blocks
Katherine Grichnik, MD
Hands-on Demonstration Stations (Registrants will rotate through each station.)
Javier Campos, MD/Peter Slinger, MD/Kathy Grichnik, MD/R. Lebron Cooper, MD/Edmond Cohen, MD/Christopher O’Connor, MD/Joyce Wahr, MD
#1: Left sided DLT/Tube Exchangers – Javier Campos, MD
#2: Right sided DLT/Tube Exchangers – Christopher O’Connor, MD
#3: Univent Tube – R. Lebron Cooper, MD
#4: Arndt Endobronchial Blocker – Peter Slinger, MD
#5: Cohen Flexitip Endobronchial Blocker – Edmond Cohen, MD
#6: Thoracic Epidural (Torso) – Joyce Wahr, MD; Katherine Grichnik, MD
10:15 am-12:15 pm
WORKSHOP 3: TEE – New and Review
Moderator: Kent Rehfeldt, MD
Intraoperative Assessment of the Thoracic Aortic: TEE and epiaortic scanning
Marc Kanchuger, MD
Diastolic Function: Intraoperative Case Studies
Madhav Swaminathan, MD
Balloon Pump and Beyond: Echo assessment of assist devices
Thomas Burch, MD
Introduction to Tissue Doppler and Strain Rate Imaging
Nikolaos Skubas, MD
10:15 am-12:15 pm
WORKSHOP 4: Adults with Congenital Heart Disease: Arrhythmias, Sequelae and Recent
Advances in non-Surgical Management
Moderators: Kathryn Rouine-Rapp, MD/Chandra Ramamoorthy, MB, BS
Arrhythmias in Adults with CHD
Emad B. Mossad, MD
Sequelae of CHD in the Adult
Paul I. Reynolds, MD
Recent Advances in the Non-surgical Management of CHD
James DiNardo, MD
12 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
SCA 30th Annual Meeting Program
WORKSHOPS
1:00-4:00 pm
WORKSHOP 5: handheld ultrasound
Moderators: Kathryn Glas, MD/François Beique, MD, FRCPC
Faculty for hands-on: Regional -Michael Byas-Smith, MD/Brian Spence, MD/Jason Taylor, MD
Vascular: François Beique, MD, FRCPC/Alexander Mittnacht, MD/Gregg Hartman, MD
TTE: Donald Oxorn, MD/Kathryn Glas, MD/Katherine Grichnik, MD
1:00-4:00 pm
WORKSHOP 6: Essentials of CPB
Madhav Swaminathan, MD, FASE
Learning From Our Colleagues: A perfusionist’s perspective of going on and off bypass
David Kaemmer, CCP
CPB Management Issues in High Stroke Risk Patients
George Djaiani, MD
How Low Can You Go? Hemodilution and hematocrit
Nutan Mehta, MD
CPB Temperature Management Strategies: Current perspectives
Glenn Murphy, MD
CPB Strategies In Aortic Surgery: Partial bypass, cerebral perfusion and rewarming
Wanda Popescu, MD
Managing the Complicated Patient: Herapin-induced Thrombocytopenia
Thomas Slaughter, MD
4:15-7:15 pm
WORKSHOP 7: TEE AdvanceD Clinical Cases
Moderators: Nikolaos Skubas, MD/Kent Rehfeldt, MD
Quantitation of Regurgitant Lesions
Albert Perrino, MD
3-D: Imaging Tomorrow
Douglas Shook, MD
Challenging Cases In Prosthetic Valve Assessment
Albert Cheung, MD
Echocardiographic Findings In Systemic Disease
Kent Rehfeldt, MD
SUNDAY, June 22, 2008
8:00-10:00 am
Workshop 8: handheld ultrasound
Moderators: Kathryn Glas, MD and François Beique, MD, FRCPC
Faculty for hands-on: Regional -Michael Byas-Smith, MD/Brian Spence, MD/Garrett Kovarik, MD
Vascular: François Beique, MD, FRCPC/Alexander Mittnacht, MD/Gregg Hartman, MD
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 13
SCA 30th Annual Meeting Program
PROBLEM-BASED LEARNING DISCUSSIONS (PBLDs)
Co-Chairs: Colleen G. Koch, MD; Amanda Fox, MD; Joseph Miller, MD
Each table is limited to 15 participants and two faculty members to allow for small group interaction, discussion, and exchange of ideas.
Separate registration is required on page 33.
THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 2008 6:45-8:00 am
TABLE 1
Endovascular Stenting for TAA: To drain or not to drain?
Albert Cheung, MD and Maged Argalious, MD
TABLE 2
Blue Sky at Night: Techniques for managing congenital heart disease patients for non-cardiac surgery
Emad Mossad, MD and Kathryn Rouine-Rapp, MD
TABLE 3
Stop The Heart, Not The Head: Managing circulatory arrest for aortic arch surgery
Annette Mizuguchi, MD, PhD and Albert Perrino, MD
TABLE 4
It’s Just a Ten Minute Case: Providing support for AICD testing
Benjamin Sohmer, MD and Mark Chaney, MD
TABLE 5
Blood is Thicker Than Water: Making sense of current anticoagulants
Linda Shore-Lesserson, MD and Wanda Popescu, MD
TABLE 6
I Can’t Put it Back: Managing problems after lung resection
Christopher O’Connor, MD and Katherine P. Grichnik, MD
TABLE 7
Just Pull, It’ll Reach: Managing patients for tracheal resections
Javier H. Campos, MD and Andra Duncan, MD
TABLE 8
Inflammation and Cardiac Surgery: Impact the cascade, impact outcomes?
David Collard, MD and Brian Birmingham, MD
FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 2008 6:45-8:00 am
TABLE 9
Cardiac Testing for Non Cardiac Surgery: An evidence-based approach
Susan Garwood, MD and Josh Stearns, MD
TABLE 10
Robotic-Assisted MV Repair: Practical management issues
Pierre LeVan, MD and Robert Savage, MD
TABLE 11
Off-Pump CABG: Management issues that impact outcomes
Jack Shanewise, MD and Hong Liu, MD
TABLE 12
Who is At Risk for SAM After MV Repair?
Andrew Maslow, MD and Mohammed Minhaj, MD
TABLE 13
Protecting the ‘Beans’: Strategies for perioperative renal protection in cardiac surgery
Robert Sladen, MD and Theodore Alston, MD
TABLE 14
Carotid Revascularization: Are stents replacing open procedures?
Galina Leyvi, MD and Joseph Miller, MD
TABLE 15
Echocardiography in the Endovascular Suite
Jill Morganstern, MD and Jacob Gutsche, MD
TABLE 16
Cool Down, Warm Up: Temperature management strategies and outcomes in cardiac surgery
Hilary Grocott, MD and Michael D’Ambra, MD
SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 2008 6:45-8:00 am
TABLE 17
Atrial Fibrillation Following Cardiac Surgery: Do pharmacologic interventions impact outcomes?
Joseph Mathew, MD and Nannette Schwann, MD
TABLE 18
ARDS Update: Prevalence and management strategies
Michael Wall, MD and James Ramsay, MD
TABLE 19
Is Cerebral Oximetry Useful in Cardiac Surgery?
Dean Andropoulos, MD and James DiNardo, MD
TABLE 20
Carcinoid Disease and Myasthenia Gravis: Disorders with unique perioperative implications for cardiothoracic surgery
Marc Kanchuger, MD and Roman Sniecinski, MD
TABLE 21
Management Considerations for Axial Flow Ventricular Assist Device Implantation: How are these devices different
from pulsatile VADs?
Alina Grigore, MD and Michelle Capdeville, MD
TABLE 22
Major Vascular Surgery in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease Requiring CABG. Which should come first?
Davy Cheng, MD and Andrew Ochroch, MD
TABLE 23
Epicardial Echocardiography in Cardiac Surgery: Indications and how-to
Jutta Novalija, MD, PhD and Steven Konstadt, MD
TABLE 24
Ethics: Organ donation after cardiac death. Should anesthesiologists be involved?
Richard Wolman, MD and Michael O’Connor, DO, MPH
Theodore Alston, MD
Boston, MA
C. David Collard, MD
Houston, TX
Jacob Gutsche, MD
Penn Valley, PA
Joseph Miller, MD
Olympia, WA
E. Andrew Ochroch, MD
Philadelphia, PA
Linda Shore-Lesserson, MD
Bronx, NY
Dean Andropoulos, MD
Houston, TX
Michael D’Ambria, MD
Cambridge, MA
Marc S. Kanchuger, MD
New York, NY
Mohammed Minhaj, MD
Chicago, IL
Albert C. Perrino Jr., MD
New Haven, CT
Robert N. Sladen, MD
New York, NY
Maged Argalious, MD
Cleveland, OH
James A. DiNardo, MD
Boston, MA
Steven Konstadt, MD
Brooklyn, NY
K. Annette Mizuguchi, MD
Boston, MA
Wanda Popescu, MD
New Haven, CT
Roman Sniecinski, MD
Atlanta, GA
Brian W. Birmingham, MD
Winnetka, IL
Andra Duncan, MD
Aurora, OH
Pierre T. LeVan, MD
Maywood, IL
Jill Morganstern, MD
New York, NY
James G. Ramsay, MD
Atlanta, GA
Benjamin Sohmer, MD
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Javier H. Campos, MD
Iowa City, IA
Susan Garwood, MD
New Haven, CT
Galina Leyvi, MD
Bronx, NY
Emad Mossad, MD
Cleveland, OH
Kathryn Rouine-Rapp, MD
San Francisco, CA
Josh Stearns, MD
Baltimore, MD
Michelle J. Capdeville, MD
Cleveland, OH
Katherine P. Grichnick, MD
Durham, NC
Hong Liu, MD
Sacramento, CA
Jutta Novalija, MD, PhD
Milwaukee, WI
Robert M. Savage, MD
Cleveland, OH
Michael Wall, MD
St. Louis, MO
Mark Chaney, MD
Chicago, IL
Alina M. Grigore, MD
Houston, TX
Andrew Maslow, MD
Providence, RI
Michael S. O’Connor, DO, MPH
Cleveland, OH
Nannette M. Schwann, MD
Allentown, PA
Richard Wolman, MD
Madison, WI
Joseph P. Mathew, MD
Durham, NC
Christopher J. O’Connor, MD
Chicago, IL
Jack S. Shanewise, MD
New York, NY
Davy C. H. Cheng, MD, MSc, FRCPC Hilary Grocott, MD
London, Ontario, Canada
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Albert T. Cheung, MD
Philadelphia, PA
14 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
30th Annual Meeting Accepted Abstracts
Wednesday, June 18 • 1:45 – 3:45 pm
Poster Discussion I – Vascular/Thoracic
Moderators: K.W. Tim Park, MD and Christopher O’Connor, MD
(SCA 1–12)
SCA1
IMPACT OF BLOOD GLUCOSE LEVEL ON POSTOPERATIVE
OUTCOME IN 212 PATIENTS WITH ACUTE TYPE A AORTIC
DISSECTION
Basciani R; Carrel T; Eberle B; Haehnle A; Immer F; Zobrist C
University Hospital Bern, Bern, BE, Switzerland
SCA2
TRANSESOPHAGEAL ASSESSMENT OF RIGHT VENTRICULAR
FUNCTION DURING ONE LUNG VENTIALTION IN NONCARDIAC
THORACIC SURGERY
DeCamp M; Gangadharan S; Hess P; Karthik S; Leckie R; Lerner
A; Mahmood F; Matyal R; Mitchell J; Panzica P; Pawlowski J;
Subramaniam B
BIDMC, Boston, MA, USA
SCA3
CONTINUOUS INSULIN INFUSION HAS THE POTENTIAL TO
DECREASE THE INCIDENCE OF PERIOPERATIVE MYOCARDIAI
INFARCTION IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING LOWER EXTREMITY
BYPASS SURGERY AND ABDOMINAL AORTIC ANEURYSM SURGERY
Bose R1; Mahmood F1; Matyal R1; Mitchell J1; Novack V2; Panzica P1;
Subramaniam B1; Sundar E1;Talmor D1
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center1, Boston, MA, USA; Harvard
Clinical Research Institute2, Boston, MA, USA
SCA4
TIGHT GLUCOSE CONTROL MAY PROVIDE BENEFICIAL
CARDIOPROTECTIVE EFFECTS IN NON-DIABETICS BUT NOT IN
DIABETICS UNDERGOING VASCULAR SURGERY
Bose R; Mahmood F; Matyal R; Mitchell J; Novack V; Panzica P;
Subramaniam B; Sundar E;Talmor D
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA
SCA5
EVALUATION OF PULSE PRESSURE VARIATION AND CORRECTED
FLOW TIME AS PREDICTORS OF FLUID RESPONSIVENESS DURING
ONE-LUNG VENTILATION
Bahk J2; Hong D2; Jeon Y2; Lee J1
Samsung Medical Center1, Seoul, Korea; Seoul National University
Hospital2, Seoul, Korea
SCA6
DESCENDING THORACIC AORTIC CROSS-CLAMPING CAN CHANGE
A PHARMACOKINETICS OF PROPOFOL IN HUMANS.
Kakinohana M; Kamizato K; Sugahara K
University of the Ryukyus, Nishihara, Okinawa, Japan
SCA7
FACTORS ASSOICATED WITH RENAL DYSFUNCTION AFTER
BILATERAL ORTHOTOPIC LUNG TRANSPLANT
Balsara K; Davis R; Lin S; Phillips-Bute B; Satyapriya A; Welsby I
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA
SCA9
A RANDOMIZED, DOUBLE BLINDED, PLACEBO CONTROLLED
CLINICAL TRIAL OF THE USE OF KETAMINE IN THORACIC
SURGERY
Bennett-Guerrero E; D’Alonzo R; D’Amico T; Podgoreanu M; Shaw A
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA
SCA10
A SEVEN-YEARS EXPERIENCE OF INTRAOPERATIVE AWAKE
GENERAL ANESTHESIA WITH REMIFENTANIL FOR THE CAROTID
ENDARTERECTOMY
Bassi F; Giordano F; Gonano N; Roccato A; Vetrugno L
Hospital, Udine, Italy
SCA11
PREDICTORS OF PERI-OPERATIVE RED BLOOD CELL
TRANSFUSION IN LUNG TRANSPLANTATION
De Perrot M; Karkouti K; Ma M; McRae K; Slinger P
Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;
SCA12
VALIDATION OF A CLINICAL RISK PREDICTION SCORE OF
THE LIKELIHOOD TO BENEFIT FROM CARDIAC TESTING AND
CORONARY REVASCULARIZATION BEFORE MAJOR VASCULAR
SURGERY
Ganon-Rozenthal T2; Landesberg G2; Subramaniam B1;Talmor D1
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center1, Boston, MA, USA; Hadassah
Medical Center2, Kiryat-Hadassah, Jerusalem, Israel
Wednesday, June 18 • 1:45 – 3:45 pm
Poster Discussion II – CPB
Moderators: Sheldon Goldstein, MD and Manuel Fontes, MD
(SCA 13–24)
SCA13
DOES PROPHYLACTIC ADMINISTRATION OF SIVELESTAT SODIUM
HYDRATE IMPROVE POSTOPERATIVE PAO2/FIO2 RATIO IN
PATIENTS UNDERGOING CARDIAC AND AORTIC SURGERY WITH
CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS?
Gamo M; Higashi T; Hirose Y; Kokawa A;Yazawa R
Kanagawa Cardiovascular and Respiratory Center, Yokohama,
Kanagawa, Japan
SCA14
PLATELET TRANSFUSION IN CARDIAC SURGERY DOES NOT
CONFER INCREASED RISK FOR ADVERSE MORBID OUTCOMES
Blackstone E; Figueroa P; Koch C; Li L; McGrath T; Mihaljevic T; Xu M
Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, U.S.
SCA15
STATINS ARE INDEPENDENTLY ASSOCIATED WITH REDUCED
MORTALITY IN PATIENTS WITH PREOPERATIVE RENAL
INSUFFICIENCY UNDERGOING CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS
GRAFT SURGERY
Collard C1; Elayda M2; Lee V2; Pan W1;Tolpin D1
Baylor College of Medicine1, Houston, Texas, USA; The Texas Heart
Institute2, Houston, Texas, USA
SCA8
IS EXTUBATION IN THE OPERATING ROOM (OR) AFTER IVORLEWIS ESOPHAGECTOMY SAFE?
Amar D; Pedoto A; Rizk N; Zhang H
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 15
SCA16
MOLECULAR CLASSIFICATION AND PREDICTION OF MULTIPLE
ORGAN FAILURE COMPLICATING CARDIAC SURGERY USING
MULTIPLEX SERUM PROTEIN MARKERS
Mathew J; Newman M; Podgoreanu M;Turer A; van der Westhuizen J;
White W
DUMC, Durham, NC, USA
SCA17
A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL OF CELL SALVAGE IN
ROUTINE CARDIAC SURGERY
Armstrong J1; Bottrill F1; Dyer M2; Klein A1; Nashef S1; Sharples L1;
Vuylsteke A1
Papworth Hospital1, Cambridge, Cambs, UK; Bristol University2,
Bristol, Avon, UK
SCA18
HIGH-DOSE MAGNESIUM THERAPY DOES NOT DECREASE ATRIAL
FIBRILLATION AFTER CARDIAC SURGERY
Mathew J; Newman M; Podgoreanu M; Stafford-Smith M;Thunberg C;
White W
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA
SCA19
DIASTOLIC DYSFUNCTION IS PREDICTIVE OF ADVERSE
OUTCOMES FOLLOWING CARDIAC SURGERY INDEPENDENT OF
SYSTOLIC FUNCTION
Antonio B1; Groban L1; Houle T1; Kincaid E1; Kon N1; Ntuen E1; Sanders
D1; Zvara D2
Wake Forest University School of Medicine1, Winston-Salem, NC, USA;
Ohio State University Medical Center2, Columbus, OH, USA
SCA20
EARLY POSTOPERATIVE NEUTROPHIL GELATINASE-ASSOCIATED
LIPOCALIN (NGAL) PREDICTS ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY (AKI)
FOLLOWING CARDIAC SURGERY
Body S1; Collard C2; Fox A1; Liu K1; Muehlschlegel J1; Perry T1; Shernan
S1
Brigham and Women’s Hospital1, Boston, MA, United States of
America; Texas Heart Institute2, Houston, TX, United States of
America
SCA21
THE EFFECT OF SINGLE DOSE INTRAVENOUS AMIODARONE IN
PATIENTS WITH RHEUMATIC ATRIAL FIBRILLATION UNDERGOING
VALVULAR HEART SURGERY
Chauhan S; Das S; Gharde P; Hasija S; Kapoor P; Kiran U; Sahu B;
Selvaraj T
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India
SCA22
AN INVESTIGATION OF THE COMPARATIVE VALIDITY OF BNP AND
TROPONIN-I FOR MEASUREMENT OF ISCHEMIA-REPERFUSION
INJURY IN HEART TRANSPLANTATION
McIlroy D; Roubos N; Wallace S
Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
SCA23
IDENTIFICATION OF COMMON GENETIC VARIANTS ASSOCIATED
WITH SEVERE POSTOPERATIVE BLEEDING AFTER CORONARY
ARTERY BYPASS GRAFT SURGERY
Aranki S1; Body S1; Collard C2; Fox A1; Lichtner P3; Liu K1; Meitinger T3;
Muehlschlegel J1; Perry T1; Shernan S1
Brigham and Women’s Hospital1, Boston, MA, United States;
Texas Heart Institute, St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital2, Houston, TX,
United States; Institute of Human Genetics3, Neuherberg, Bavaria,
Germany
16 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
SCA24
HEART-TYPE FATTY ACID BINDING PROTEIN IS AN EARLY-PEAKING
AND INDEPENDENT PREDICTOR OF DEATH AFTER CORONARY
ARTERY BYPASS GRAFT SURGERY
Body S1; Collard C2; Fox A1; Liu K1; Muehlschlegel J1; Perry T1; Shernan
S1
Brigham and Women’s Hospital1, Boston, MA, United States; Texas
Heart Institute, St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital2, Houston, TX, United
States
Thursday, June 19 • 1:30 – 3:30 pm
Session C: Poster Discussion III
Perioperative Monitoring/Echocardiography
Moderators: Christopher Troianos, MD and George Silvay, MD
(SCA 25–36)
SCA25
EVALUATION OF PULSE PRESSURE VARIATION AS AN INDICATOR
OF HEMODYNAMIC INSTABILITY AND A PREDICTOR OF FLUID
RESPONSIVENESS DURING THE DISPLACEMENT OF HEART IN
PATIENTS UNDERGOING OFF-PUMP CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS
SURGERY
Bahk J2; Jeon Y2; Lee J1; Lee J1
Samsung Medical Center1, Seoul, Korea; Samsung Medical Center,
Seoul, Korea; Seoul National University Hospital2, Seoul, Korea
SCA26
VALUE OF AUGMENTED REALITY ENHANCED TRANSESOPHAGEAL
ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY (TEE) FOR DETERMINING OPTIMAL
ANNULOPLASTY RING SIZE DURING MITRAL VALVE REPAIR
Borger M; Ender J; Falk V; Gessat M; Jacobs S; Koncar Zeh J; Mukherjee
C
University Leipzig Heartcenter, Leipzig, Saxony, Germany
SCA27
IMPACT OF 3D TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY IN
IMPROVING IDENTIFICATION OF MITRAL VALVE PATHOLOGY
Glower D; Jungwirth B; Lemons J; Mackensen GB; Phillips-Bute B;
Swaminathan M
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA
SCA28
TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHIC FEATURES OF
ENDOLEAKS AFTER STENT-GRAFT PROCEDURES FOR CHRONIC
TYPE B AORTIC DISSECTION: RELATION TO FOLLOW-UP RESULTS
Imoto K1; Koide Y1; Okamura K1; Okazaki K1;Yamakawa M2
Yokohama City Unversity Medical Center1, Yokohama, Kanagawap, Japan; Fujisawa Shonandai Hospital2, Fujisawa, Kanagawa-p,
Japan
SCA29
SPECKLE TRACKING IMAGING PROVIDES UNIQUE INSIGHT INTO
LEFT VENTRICULAR SYSTOLIC FUNCTION---ASSESSMENT OF LEFT
VENTRICULAR ROTATION
Ashraf M1; Mahajan A1; Marcucci C2; Swaminathan M2; Zhou W1
UCLA1, Los Angeles, CA, USA; Duke Medical Center2, Durham, NC,
USA
SCA30
SPECKLE TRACKING IS SUPERIOR TO TISSUE DOPPLER FOR
INTRAOPERATIVE TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY
STRAIN ANALYSIS AND ENABLES ASSESSMENT OF SEQUENTIAL
VENTRICULAR CONTRACTION
Aronson S; Lauer R; Marcucci C; Swaminathan M
Duke University, Durham, NC, USA
SCA31
REAL TIME THREE-DIMENSIONAL INTRAOPERATIVE
TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY FOR EVALUATING
MITRAL VALVE PATHOLOGY
Fox J; Nascimben L; Shernan S; Shook D
Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA, USA
SCA32
THE HELICAL BAND THEORY OF MYOCARDIAL FUNCTION IS
SUPPORTED BY SPECKLE TRACKING WITH INTRAOPERATIVE TEE
DURING CARDIAC SURGERY
Aronson S; Lauer R; Marcucci C; Swaminathan M
Duke University, Durham, NC, USA
SCA33
THE POSTOPERATIVE ELECTROCARDIOGRAM IS NOT PREDICTIVE
OF ADVERSE CARDIAC EVENTS FOLLOWING CORONARY ARTERY
BYPASS GRAFT SURGERY
Body S1; Collard C2; Fox A1; Liu K1; Muehlschlegel J1; Orav EJ1; Perry T1;
Shernan S1
Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Texas
Heart Institute, St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital2, Houston, TX, United
States
SCA34
ASSESSMENT OF LEFT VENTRICULAR FUNCTION USING SPECKLE
TRACKING ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY DURING VASOPRESSORINDUCED INCREASES IN AFTERLOAD IN A RABBIT MODEL.
Ashraf M; Corniea J; Ho J; Mahajan A; Sanchez E; Zhou W
University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
SCA35
DIASTOLIC DYSFUNCTION AND POSTOPERATIVE ATRIAL
FIBRILLATION IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING CORONARY
REVASCULARIZATION SURGERY
Carroll J; Carroll J; Djaiani G; Karski J; Lavi R; Meineri M
University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
SCA36
PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF PERIOPERATIVE TROPONIN I LEVELS FOR
PREDICTING CARDIOVASCULAR COMPLICATIONS FOLLOWING
CARDIAC SURGERY IN POSTMENOPAUSAL WOMEN
Grogan K1; Hogue C1; Stearns J1;Thompson R2
Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions1, Baltimore, MD, USA;
Bloomberg School of Public Health2, Baltimore, MD, USA
Saturday, June 21 • 1:30 – 3:30 pm
Session C: Poster Discussion IV –
Experimental Circulation
Moderators: Edwin Avery, MD and Michael Avidan, MD
(SCA 37–48)
SCA37
NORMOTHERMIC CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS REDUCES
DIAPHRAGM CONTRACTILE FORCES IN RATS
Atchison F; Ereth M; Ermilov L; Mantilla C; Neal J; Pulido J; Sieck G;
Zhan W
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA
SCA38
INHIBITION OF APOPTOTIC PROTEIN P53 LOWERS THE
THRESHOLD FOR HELIUM-INDUCED CARDIOPROTECTION IN
RABBITS
Amour J; Pagel P; Pratt P; Warltier D; Weihrauch D
Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US
SCA39
THE EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE AND MINOCYCLINE ON OUTCOME
AFTER PROLONGED HYPOTHERMIC CIRCULATORY ARREST IN
RATS
Beuke L; Drabek T; Feldman K; Kochanek P; Lahoud-Rahme M;
Stezoski J;Tisherman S
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
SCA40
PITX2 REGIONAL GENE VARIANTS ARE ASSOCIATED WITH NEWONSET ATRIAL FIBRILLATION AFTER CARDIAC SURGERY
Body S1; Collard C2; Fox A1; Liu K1; Muehlschlegel J1; Perry T1; Shernan
S1
Brigham and Women’s Hospital1, Boston, MA, USA; Texas Heart
Institute2, Houston, TX, USA
SCA41
DOES THE PERIOPERATIVE APPLICATION OF MOXIFLOXACIN
INFLUENCE LONG TERM NEUROLOGIC AND HISTOLOGIC
OUTCOME FOLLOWING DEEP HYPOTHERMIC CIRCULATORY
ARREST IN RATS?
Blobner M1; Denzler S1; Jungwirth B2; Kellermann K1; Kochs E1;
Stueckle J1
Klinikum rechts der Isar1, Munich, Bavaria, Germany; Duke
University2, Durham, NC, USA
SCA42
GENE EXPRESSION SIGNATURES OF CEREBRAL INJURY
FOLLOWING DEEP HYPOTHERMIC CIRCULATORY ARREST IN
NEONATAL PIGS
Cindy B1; Dobra A3; Du P2; Jaggers J1; Lin S2; Podgoreanu M1; Sheikh A1;
Villamizar N1
Duke University1, Durham, NC, USA; Northwestern University2,
Chicago, IL, USA; University of Washington3, Seattle, WA, USA
SCA43
ADVANCED AGE AND MYOCARDIAL SERCA2A ACTIVITY
FOLLOWING LUNG RESECTION IN SWINE
Heerdt P;Yoon E
Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA
SCA44
A COMPARISON OF GENE EXPRESSION CHANGES IN PERIPHERAL
CIRCULATING LEUKOCYTES AND CEREBRAL TISSUE IN RESPONSE
TO CPB/DHCA IN RATS
Conlon N1; Dobra A2; Mackensen GB1; Podgoreanu M1; Qing M1
Duke University Medical Center1, Durham, NC, USA; University Of
Washington2, Seattle, WA, USA
SCA45
L-ARGININE COMPROMISES PROPOFOL PROTECTION OF THE
ENDOTHELIUM AGAINST TNF-ALPHA INDUCED APOPTOTIC CELL
DEATH
Fan Q4; Liu H2; Luo T2; Ouyang J3; Wang F2; Xia Z1; Xia Z2;Yang X4
Hong Kong University1, Hong Kong, China; Renmin Hospital of
Wuhan University2, Wuhan, Hubei, China; Basic Medical School of
Wuhan Uni3, Wuhan, Hubei, China; Beijing Chaoyang HospitalAffiliate of Capital Medical University4, Beiing, China
SCA46
DIFFERENTIAL CARDIOVASCULAR RESPONSES OF NNOS IN MICE
DURING ACUTE HEMODILUTIONAL ANEMIA AND SYSTEMIC
HYPOXIA
Adamson L1; Hare G2; Marsden P1; Mazer D2;Tsui A1
University of Toronto1, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; St. Michael’s
Hospital2, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 17
SCA47
EXPLORING THE INTERACTION OF REMOTE ISCHEMIC AND
ANESTHETIC-INDUCED PRECONDITIONING PATHWAYS
Kim MK3; Lee JW1; Li J2; Redington A2;Tropak M2
Yonsei University Medical College1, Seoul, Republic of Korea; The
Hospital for Sick Children2, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Kyung-Hee
University Medical College3, Seoul, Republic of Korea
SCA54
INTRAOPERATIVE MANAGEMENT OF CARDIAC OUTPUT
AND STROKE VOLUME VARIATION MEASURED BY THE
ARTERIAL PRESSURE WAVEFORM ANALYSIS DURING THE VALVE
REPLACEMENT SURGERY FOR THE AORTIC STENOSIS PATIENT
Nohmi T; Ohnishi Y;Yoshitani K
National Cardiovascular Center, Suita, Osaka, Japan
SCA48
IN-VITRO STUDY OF THE SMALL MOLECULE PROTEASE
INHIBITOR CU-2010 – A NOVEL HEMOSTASIS MODULATOR WITH
ANTIFIBRINOLYTIC AND ANTICOAGULATIVE PROPERTIES
Dietrich W1; Nicklisch S2; Spannagl M3; van de Locht A2
Institute for Research in Cardiac Anesthesia1, Munich, Bay,
Germany; Curacyte Discovery GmbH2, Leipzig, Sa, Germany;
Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich3, Munich, Bay, Germany
SCA55
THE USE OF PULSECO™ FOR BIVENTRICULAR PACING
OPTIMIZATION AFTER CARDIAC SURGERY
Booth J; Cabreriza S; Quinn TA; Richmond M; Spotnitz H; Weinberg A
Columbia University, Houston, TX, United States; Columbia
University, New York, NY, United States
Friday Posters – Friday, June 20
12:30 – 1:30 pm
Moderators: Nikolaos Skubas, MD and Wanda Popescu, MD
(SCA 49-88)
SCA49
USE OF CREATININE LEVELS FOR STAGING OF ACUTE KIDNEY
INJURY IN PEDIATRIC PATIENTS UNDERGOING OPEN HEART
SURGERY
Breuer T; Cserép Z; Fischer K; Hartyánszky I; Héthársi B; Sápi E;
Szatmári A; Székely A; Szenczi B;Tóth R
Gottsegen György Hungarian Institute of Cardiology, Budapest,
Budapest, Hungary
SCA50
EFFECT OF ORAL SILDENAFIL CITRATE AND ORAL BERAPROST
COMBINED TREATMENT ON INTRAOPERATIVE HEMODYNAMICS
IN PATIENTS WITH PULMONARY HYPERTENSION UNDERGOING
VALVULAR HEART SURGERY.
Choi Y1; Hong SW1; Jung SM2; Lee JH1; Lee JY1
Yonsei University College of Medicine1, Seoul, Republic of Korea;
Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea;
Konyang University College of Medicine2, Daejeon, Republic of
Korea
SCA51
THE IN VITRO EFFECTS OF REMIFENTANIL ON ISOLATED HUMAN
INTERNAL MAMMARY ARTERY
Cabrera M; Camacho J; Charris H; Delgadillo A; Echeverri D; Montes F;
Umaña J
Fundacion Cardio Infantil, Bogota, Cundinamar, Colombia
SCA52
“INTRAOPERATIVE USEFULNESS OF REALTIME 3D
ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY FOR TRANSAPICAL AORTIC VALVE
IMPLANTATION.”
Ender J; Koncar-zeh J; Krohmer E; Mohr F; Mukherjee C; Walther T
Leipzig Heart Center,University Clinic, Leipzig, Sachsen, Germany
SCA53
PREOPERATIVE BLOOD PRESSURE MANAGEMENT WITH SODIUM
NITROPRUSSIDE OR NITROGLYCERIN IS ASSOCIATED WITH
AN INCREASED RISK OF 30-DAY MORTALITY COMPARED WITH
CLEVIDIPINE: RESULTS OF THE ECLIPSE TRIALS
Aronson S1; Avery E6; Cheung A4; Fontes M5; Levy J2; Lumb P3; Newman
M1
Duke University Med. Center1, Durham, NC, US; Emory University2,
Atlanta, GA, US; University of Southern California3, Los Angeles,
CA, US; University of Pennsylvania4, Philadelphia, PA, US; Cornell
University5, Ithaca, NY, US; Massachusetts General Hospital6,
Boston, MA, US
18 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
SCA56
LOCATION OF THE CARADIOPULMONARY BYPASS MACHINE IN
THE OPERATING ROOM: AN INITIAL SURVEY OF DIFFERENCES IN
PRACTICE PATTERNS
Barron M; Candiotti K; Gaitan B; Martin M
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA
SCA57
MEASUREMENT OF PULMONARY ARTERY VELOCITY
(VTI) BY TRANSESOPHAGEAL PULSED WAVE DOPPLER
ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY (PWD) TO ESTIMATE CARDIAC INDEX (CI).
Gonzalez Luza M1; Penna A1; Rufs J2; Sabbatino A2
Universidad de Chile1, Santiago, RM, Chile; Hospital DIPRECA2,
Santiago, RM, Chile; Hospital Clinico Universidad de Chile1,
Santiago, RM, Chile
SCA58
IMPAIRED LYMPHOCYTE GLUCOSE METABOLISM AND
ENERGETICS AFTER CARDIAC SURGERY IN HUMANS: POSSIBLE
MECHANISMS FOR CELL DEATH AND IMMUNOSUPPRESSION
Bilodeau M2; Briet F1; Chan E1; Chan T2; Errett L1; Kadakia A1; Maughan
A1; Mazer CD1; Michaud D1; Zhang H1
Keenan Research Centre in the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute,
St Michael’s Hospital, University of Toronto1, Toronto, ON, Canada;
Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (CHUM), Hôpital
Saint-Luc2, Montreal, QC, Canada
SCA59
COMPARISON OF THE SNAP II AND BIS VISTA INDICES DURING
NORMOTHERMIC CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS
Fitzgerald P; McCarthy R; Patel K; Sherwani S
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL,
USA
SCA60
EVALUATION OF AN ENDOTRACHEAL CONTINUOUS CARDIAC
OUTPUT MONITOR IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING CARDIAC
SURGERY
Corniea J; Crowley R; Duvvuri R; Ho J; Mahajan A; Salehi A; Sanchez E
UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA
SCA61
PERIOPERATOVE CHANGES IN HUMAN ATRIAL NATRIURETIC
PEPTIDE, RENIN-ANGIOTENSIN-ALDOSTERONE SYSTEM, AND
RENAL FUNCTION IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING OFF-PUMP
CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS SURGERY
Kato J2; Katori N2;Takeda J2; Ueda T1;Yamada T2
Kawasaki City Hospital1, Kawasaki-shi, Kanagawa-k, Japan; School
of Medicine, Keio University2, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan
SCA62
CAN INTRAOPERATIVE TEE PRECISELY EVALUATE THE OPTIMAL
SIZE AND POSITION OF PA BANDING?
Baba H; Honma T; Imai H; Kurokawa S
Niigata University, Niigata City, Niigata Pr, Japan
SCA63
GLOBAL STRAIN BY SPECKLE TRACKING: PERIOPERATIVE
OBSERVATIONS DURING CARDIAC SURGERY. A PILOT STUDY
Fontes M; Heerdt P; Johnston C; Leverich A; Skubas N
Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA
SCA64
CASE WORKLOAD AFTER MIDNIGHT AT ONE ACADEMIC
INSTITUTION: DO CARDIOTHORACIC (CT) ANESTHESIOLOGISTS
OR NON-CT ANESTHESIOLOGISTS WORK MORE?
Maratea E2; Sniecinski R1;Tanaka K1
Emory University Hospital1, Atlanta, GA, USA; Emory Crawford
Long Hospital2, Atlanta, GA, USA
SCA65
COMBINING STRAIN AND PERFUSION IMAGING COULD IMPROVE
THE OUTCOME IN EVALUATION OF CORONARY ISCHEMIA
Ashraf M1; Belchik T2; Mahajan A1; Sahn D2; Wei K2
University of California, Los Angeles1, Los Angeles, CA, USA; Oregon
Health Science Center2, Portland, OR, USA
SCA66
INTRAOPERATIVE PLACEMENT OF PULMONARY ARTERY
CATHETER USING TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY.
Ecuyer J; Kanchuger M; Ngai J; Ostrowski J; Wang M
New York University, NY, NY, US
SCA67
PREDICTION AND DIAGNOSIS OF POSTOPERATIVE DEEP
VEIN THROMBOSIS IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING TOTAL KNEE
OR HIP ARTHROPLASTY ; USING BY PLASMA D-DIMER AND
ULTRASONOGRAPHY
Minami T; Sawai T;Tatsumi S
Osaka Medical College, Takatsuki, Osaka, JAPAN
SCA68
THE INCIDENCE OF THROMBOEMBOLIC EVENTS IN PATIENTS
WITH ANTIBODIES TO HEPARIN-PF4 AFTER CARDIAC SURGERY
Krakow E; Ortel T; Welsby I; Whitlach N
DUMC, Durham, NC, USA
SCA69
BLOOD PRESSURE CONTROL PREDICTS 30-DAY MYOCARDIAL
INFARCTION IN CARDIAC SURGERY PATIENTS: ANALYSIS FROM
THE ECLIPSE TRIALS
Aronson S8; Avery E1; Cheung A7; Dyke C3; Kereiakes D4; Levy J5; Lumb
P6; Richardson Jr J2
Massachusetts General Hospital1, Boston, MA, US; St.Vincent’s
Hospital2, Birmingham, AL, USA; Gaston Memorial Hospital3,
Gastonia, NC, USA; The Christ Hospital4, Cincinnati, OH, USA;
Emory University5, Atlanta, GA, US; University of Southern
California6, Los Angeles, CA, US; University of Pennsylvania7,
Philadelphia, PA, USA; Duke University Medical Center8, Durham,
NC, US
SCA70
PREOPERATIVE ACE INHIBITOR USE ATTENUATES HEPARININDUCED HYPOTENSION
Chaney M1; Drum M3; Strouch Z1;Taneja R2
University of Chicago Hospitals1, Chicago, IL, USA; University of
Texas Southwestern Medical Center2, Dallas, Texas, USA; University
of Chicago3, Chicago, IL, USA
SCA71
PLATELET FUNCTIONS IN CHILDREN UNDERGOING SURGERY
FOR CYANOTIC CHD.
Brill A2; Rivo J1; Varon D3
University of Washington1, Seattle, WA, USA; Hebrew University
Medical Center2, Jerusalem, Israel; Hadassah University Medical
Center3, Jerusalem, Israel
SCA72
SEVOFLURANE INHALATION PROTECTS ENDOTHELIUM AGAINST
ISCHEMIA-REPERFUSION INJURY IN A DOSE DEPENDENT MANNER:
A HUMAN IN VIVO STUDY
Arain S; Novalija E; Novalija J;Thomas E
MCW, Milwaukee, WI, USA
SCA73
PRACTICE TRENDS IN PROTECTIVE LUNG VENTILATION FOR
THORACIC SURGERY
Amar D; Desiderio D; Frisk S; Heerdt P; Pedoto A; Zhang H
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA
SCA74
PERIOPERATIVE MORBIDITY FOLLOWING DIFFERENT TYPES OF
CORONARY REVASCULARAZATION SURGERY
Carroll J; Cusimano R; Djaiani G; Karski J; Lavi R
University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
SCA75
2-DIMENSIONAL STRAIN IMAGING PROVIDES INSIGHT INTO
UNDERSTANDING THE ALTERED DYNAMIC FUNCTION OF HEART
DURING VENTRICULAR ARRHYTHMIAS ARISING FROM DIFFERENT
VENTRICULAR LOCATIONS.
Ashraf M1; Dave A1; Mahajan A1; Swaminathan M2; Zhou W1
UCLA1, Los Angeles, CA, USA; Duke Medical Center2, Durham, NC,
USA
SCA76
TRANSFUSION OF FRESH FROZEN PLASMA DURING
CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY INCREASES THE RISK OF
POSTOPERATIVE INFECTION
Iwade M; Nomura M; Seino Y; Shoji S
Tokyo Women’s Medical University, Tokyo, Japan
SCA77
DIASTOLIC FILLING CORRELATES WITH THE DEGREE OF SYSTOLIC
SHORTENING
Ashraf M1; Ho J1; Mahajan A1; Sahn D2
University of California, Los Angeles1, Los Angeles, CA, USA; Oregon
Health Science Center2, Portland, OR, USA
SCA78
CHANGES IN BLOOD PRESSURE AFTER MODIFIED
ULTRAFILTRATION IN CONGENITAL HEART SURGERY:
CORRELATION WITH BLOOD VISCOSITY.
Aeschlimann N; Becker P; Canessa R; Carvajal C; Godoy C; Lema G;
Merino W; Ocaranza MP
Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Santiago, Region Met,
Chile
SCA79
PREOPERATIVE MALADAPTATION OF LYMPHOCYTE GLUCOSE
METABOLISM IN CARDIAC SURGERY PATIENTS
Bilodeau M2; Briet F1; Chan E1; Chan T2; Harrington A1; Maughan A1;
Mazer CD1; Zhang H1
Keenan Research Centre in the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute,
St Michael’s Hospital, University of Toronto1, Toronto, ON, Canada;
Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (CHUM), Hôpital
Saint-Luc2, Montreal, QC, Canada
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 19
SCA80
THROMBIN GENERATION IS ATTENUATED WITH APROTININ,
BUT NOT WITH EPSILON-AMINOCAPROIC ACID IN PATIENTS
UNDERGOING CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS SURGERY
Greilich P; Sarode R; Satyanarayana N;Taneja R; Whitten C
UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA
SCA81
INFLUENCE OF TOTAL AND SUBTOTAL ASCENDING AORTA
ANEURYSMECTOMY ON HEMODYNAMIC INDICES OF ARTERIAL
STIFFENING
Fontes M; Girardi L; Karen R; Paul H; Skubas N
Weill Medical College of Cornell, NYC, NY, USA
SCA82
COMPARISON OF SENSITIVE URINARY MARKERS OF RENAL
INJURY AND INFLAMMATION AFTER CARDIAC SURGERY WITH
CPB.
Epema A; Loef B; Mungroop H; Oeveren W
University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands
SCA83
ANESTHETIC MANAGEMENT FOR TRANS-CATHETER AORTIC VALVE
IMPLANTATION: INITIAL EXPERIENCE
Karski J; Meineri M; Vegas A; Wasowicz M
Toronto General Hospital/University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario,
Canada
SCA84
HEMODYNAMIC EFFECTS OF PHOSPHODIESTERASE-3 INHIBITORS,
OLPRINONE AND MILRINONE AFTER OPEN HEART SURGERY IN
CHILD OF CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE
Iwasaki T; Kanazawa T; Morita K; Shimizu K; Suzuki S;Toda Y
Okyama University Graduate School of Medical and Dentistry,
Okayama City, Okayama, Japan
SCA85
NORMOTHERMIC CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS REDUCES
PHRENIC NERVE NEUROMUSCULAR TRANSMISSION IN RATS
Atchison F; Ereth M; Ermilov L; Mantilla C; Neal J; Pulido J; Sieck G;
Zhan W
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA
SCA86
EVALUATION OF RADIAL ARTERIAL LINE INSERTION FOLLOWING
IPSILATERAL RADIAL CATHETERIZATION
Cruchley P; Kim HH; Way M
St. Mary’s General Hospital, Kitchener, ON, Canada
SCA87
LOW TIDAL VOLUME AND HIGH POSITIVE-END EXPIRATORY
PRESSURE MECHANICAL VENTILATION INCREASE PULMONARY
INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE AND VENTILATOR-INDUCED LUNG
INJURY IN NORMAL LUNG
Brown M; Deitch E; Delphin E; Doucet D; Hong C; Lu Q; Pisarenko V;
Xu D
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, New
Jersey, United States
SCA88
SYSTEMS APPROACH TO RESTARTING A CARDIAC SURGERY
PROGRAM AND IMPROVING OUTCOMES
Kaur S; Mueller C
UMass Memorial Medical Center, Worcester, MA, USA
20 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
Saturday Posters – Saturday, June 21
12:00 – 1:30 pm
Stanton Shernan, MD and Solomon Aronson, MD
(SCA 89-128)
SCA89
DETECTING AORTIC DISSECTION USING MODIFIED
TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY
Brandon Bravo Bruinsma G2; Buhre W1; Cheung A3; Moons KGM1;
Nierich A2; van ‘t Hof AWJ2; van Zaane B1
University Medical Center Utrecht1, Utrecht, The Netherlands;
Isala Clinics2, Zwolle, Overijssel, the Netherlands; University of
Pennsylvania3, Philadelphia, PA, USA
SCA90
PREVALENCE AND STAFFING OF SPECIALIZED PRE-ANESTHESIA
CLINICS FOR DAY ADMISSION CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY
WITHDRAWN BY AUTHOR
PATIENTS.
Flynn B; Silvay G
Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, NY, United States
SCA91
CARDIOVASCULAR EFFECTS OF ORAL TRIIODOTHYRONINE IN
PATIENTS UNDERGOING VALVULAR CARDIAC SURGERY
Choi Y1; Hong SW1; Jung SM2; Lee JH1; Lee JY1
Yonsei University College of Medicine1, Seoul, Republic of Korea;
Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea;
Konyang University College of Medicine2, Daejeon, Daejeon,
Republic of Korea
SCA92
CHANGES IN MYOCARDIAL PERFORMANCE INDEX WITH
ABDOMINAL AORTIC CROSS CLAMP APPLICATION
Bose R; Karthik S; Mahmood F; Matyal R; Mitchell, MD J; Panzica P;
Subramaniam B; Zhao X
BIDMC, Boston, MA, USA
SCA93
ASSESSMENT OF LEFT VENTRICULAR REGIONAL FUNCTION BY
TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY: COMPARISON OF
VISUAL ESTIMATION WITH SPECKLE TRACKING
Keller D1; Mackensen G1; Mahajan A2; Marcucci C1; Mathew J1; PhillipsBute B1; Podgoreanu M1; Swaminathan M1
DUMC1, Durham, NC, USA; UCLA2, Los Angeles, CA, USA
SCA94
DESCRIPTIVE STUDY OF BLOOD TRANSFUSION AND BLOOD
CONSERVATION IN CARDIAC SURGERY IN AN ACADEMIC CENTER
Hankinson J; Neira V; Sawchuk C; Syed S;Thabane L
McMaster University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; McMaster
University, Hamilton, ON, Canada
SCA95
HALF-MOLAR SODIUM-LACTATE SOLUTION HAS A BENEFICIAL
EFFECT IN PATIENTS AFTER CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS
GRAFTING
Boom C1; Leverve X2
National Cardiovascular Center Harapan1, Jakarta Selatan,
Jakarta, Indonesia; Universite Joseph Fourier2, France
SCA96
PLASMA DONOR GENDER AND RESPIRATORY COMPLICATIONS
AFTER CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS SURGERY
Phillips-Bute B1; Stafford-Smith M1;Troughton M2; Welsby I1
DUMC1, Durham, NC, USA; UAB2, Birmingham, AL, USA
SCA97
THE OUTCOME OF MINIMALLY INVASIVE MITRAL VALVE SURGERY
IN PATIENTS WITH SEVERE MITRAL STENOSIS WITHOUT AORTIC
CROSS CLAMPING
Churchwell K; Moahmed T; Sathappan K;Theilade C
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA
SCA106
POST-CARDIAC SURGERY ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY BEFORE AND
AFTER APPLICATION OF APROTININ-USE GUIDELINES
Hill S; Lin S; Mathew J; Phillips-Bute B; Shaw A; Stafford-Smith M;
Swaminathan M; Welsby Ian
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, United States
SCA98
GENOMIC INFLUENCES CHARACTERIZING AMBULATORY AND
POST-CARDIAC SURGERY ATRIAL FIBRILLATION
Mathew J; Mathew J; Newman M; Podgoreanu M; Shaw A; White W
Duke University, Durham, NC, USA
SCA107
INTEGRATION OF ADVANCED PATIENT SIMULATION INTO
RESIDENT EDUCATION FOR CARDIAC ANESTHESIA TRAINING
Lynch J;Torsher L
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA
SCA99
IS GENERAL ANESTHESIA UNDER CONVENTIONAL MECHANICAL
VENTILATION SUITABLE TO MANAGE THE PATIENTS DURING
PEDIATRIC CARDIAC CATHETERIZATION.
Kanazawa T
Okayama University Hospital, Okayama City, Okayama, Japan
SCA108
A COMPARATIVE RANDOMIZE STUDY OF 300 CASES OF
LMA(PROSEAL) WITH STANDARD ORAL ENDOTRACHEAL TUBE
FOR ANESTHESIA AND POST OPERATIVE VENTILATION IN
CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS GRAFTING
Shastri N
Heart Care Clinic, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, INDIA
SCA100
THE DETERIORATION OF THE DIASTOLIC FUNCTION DURING
OFF-PUMP CABG DEPENDS ON REGIONAL WALL MOTION
ABNORMALITIES
Mizunuma M2; Nomura M1; Ozaki M1; Seino Y1;Tomaru T2
Tokyo Women’s Medical University1, Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan; Showa
University Fujigaoka Hospital2, Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan
SCA101
MEASUREMENT OF LEFT VENTRICULAR SYSTOLIC STRAIN : A
COMPARISON OF TRANSTHORACIC AND TRANSESOPHAGEAL
ECHOCARDIOGRAPHICTECHNIQUES
Keller D1; Mackensen GB1; Mahajan A2; Marcucci C1; Mathew J1;
Phillips-Bute B1; Podgoreanu M1; Swaminathan M1
DUMC1, Durham, NC, USA; UCLA2, Los Angeles, CA, USA
SCA102
INTRAOPERATIVE TEE DIAGNOSIS OF SUBACUTE MECHANICAL
VALVE THROMBOSIS IN A PATIENT RECEIVING ENOXAPARIN
BRIDGE THERAPY FOR ANTICOAGULATION
Frogel J; Mallu S
Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI, USA
SCA103
EFFECT OF A PERIOPERATIVE BETA-BLOCKER INITIATIVE ON THE
INCIDENCE OF ATRIAL FIBRILLATION AFTER THORACOTOMY
Amar D; Frisk S; Zhang H
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York, USA
SCA104
DOES APROTININ AFFECT SURVIVAL IN DOUBLE-LUNG AND
HEART-LUNG TRANSPLANTATION?
Ahlbrand S; Cornelissen C; Dhillon G; Fujiki M; Hill C; Mora-Mangano
C; Oakes D
Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
SCA105
TSE “MASK” IMPROVES OXYGENATION IN SEDATED PATIENTS
DURING TEE
Barsoum S; Cebula J; Cohen S; Corless M; Hunter C; Negron M;
Shindler D;Tse J
UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ,
USA
SCA109
TRACHEAL EXTUBATION IN OPERATING ROOM AFTER OPCAB
SURGERY
Dal A; Dronam Raju A; Kumar K; Rao R
Apollo Heath City, Hyderabad, Andhra Pra, India
SCA110
C-REACTIVE PROTEIN (CRP) GENE VARIANTS ARE ASSOCIATED
WITH PEAK CRP LEVELS FOLLOWING CORONARY ARTERY BYPASS
GRAFT SURGERY
Body S1; Collard C2; Fox A1; Liu K1; Muehlschlegel J1; Perry T1; Shernan
S1
Brigham and Women’s Hospital1, Boston, MA, United States of
America; Texas Hear Institute2, Houston, TX, United States of
America
SCA111
HYPOTENSION INDUCED BY RIGHT ATRIAL INFLOW OCCLUSION
FOR THORACIC AORTIC ENDOVASCULAR STENT PLACEMENT
Carvalho N; Gravenstein N; Lee W; Martin T; Peng Y
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
SCA112
IS REAL-TIME-3D SUPERIOR TO 2D-TRANSESOPHAGEAL
ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY TO IDENTIFY SEGMENTAL INVOLVEMENT
OF THE MITRAL VALVE IN MITRAL REGURGITATION?
Adams D; Glower D; Jungwirth B; Mackensen GB; Mathew J; PhillipsBute B; Swaminathan M
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA
SCA113
NATURAL HISTORY OF RENAL DYSFUNCTION AFTER BILATERAL
ORTHOTOPIC LUNG TRANSPLANT
Balsara K; Davis R; Lin S; Phillips-Bute B; Satyapriya A; Welsby I
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA
SCA114
COMPARISON OF THE HYBRID PROCEDURE TO THE STAGE I
NORWOOD REPAIR FOR NEONATES WITH HYPOPLASTIC LEFT
HEART SYNDROME
Castro P1; Farid I3; Mossad E2; Motta P1
Cleveland Clinic1, Cleveland, OH, US; Texas Children’s Hospital2,
Houston, TX, US; Akron Children’s Hospital3, Akron, OH, US
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 21
SCA115
CHANGES IN MITRAL VALVE GEOMETRY FOLLOWING REPAIR OF
ISCHEMIC MITRAL REGURGITATION
DeLatorre R; Jervis K; Karthik S; Lerner A; Mahmood F; Panzica P;
Subramaniam B
BIDMC, Boston, MA, USA
SCA116
PREDICTORS OF POSTOPERATIVE DELIRIUM IN CORONARY
SURGICAL PATIENTS
Baba T; Goto T; Maekawa K; Otomo S;Yoshitake A
Kumamoto Chuo Hospital, Kumamoto, Japan
SCA117
A RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW OF APROTININ’S SAFETY AND
EFFICACY IN NEONATES UNDERGOING CARDIOPULMONARY
BYPASS
Baker M; Evans F; Fazlollah T; Guzzetta N; Miller B
Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA
SCA118
LOW CONTINUOUS CENTRAL VENOUS OXYGEN SATURATION
(SCVO2) IN PEDIATRIC PATIENTS UNDERGOING CARDIAC
SURGERY
Canales C; Corniea J; Crowley R; Ho J; Lee K; Mahajan A; Sanchez E
UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA
SCA119
CAN THROMBOELASTOGRAPHY BE USED TO GUIDE
RECOMBINANT FACTOR VIIA THERAPY FOR REFRACTORY
HEMORRHAGE AFTER CARDIAC SURGERY? AN OBSERVATIONAL
STUDY.
Karkouti K; McCluskey S; Meineri M; Mitsakakis N;Wasowicz M
Toronto General Hospital/University Health Network, University
of Toronto, Ontario, Canada
SCA120
OFF-PUMP CABG AND ON-PUMP CABG: A RETROSPECTIVE
REVIEW OF INTRAOPERATIVE GLUCOSE CONTROL AND INSULIN
REQUIREMENTS
Afifi S; Avram M; Hanni K; Patel K; Soong W
Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA
SCA121
ACUTE PREOPERATIVE PLASMAPHERESIS IN PATIENTS WITH
HEPARIN-INDUCED THROMBOCYTOPENIA FOR CARDIAC
SURGERY
Andrews D; Barron M; Gaitan B; Katz J; Shariatmadar S
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA
SCA122
RETROGRADE PERCUTANEOUS AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT IN
SEVERE AORTIC VALVE STENOSIS: ANESTHESIA MANAGEMENT AND
SHORT TERM OUTCOME
Basciani R; Eberle B; Henle S; Wenaweser P; Windecker S; Zobrist C
University Hospital Bern, BE, Switzerland
SCA123
DISPROPORTIONATE INCREASE IN ACUTE RENAL FAILURE
ASSOCIATED WITH CARDIAC TRANSPLANTATION IN THE UNITED
STATES
Martinelli S; Milano C; Patel U; Phillips-Bute B; Shaw A; Stafford-Smith
M; Swaminathan M
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA
22 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
SCA124
AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT AND ACUTE KIDNEY INJURY:
MINIMALLY INVASIVE PARASTERNOTOMY VERUSUS MEDIAN
STERNOTOMY
Glower D; Mathew J; Phillips-Bute B; Shaw A; Stafford-Smith M;
Swaminathan M;Ten Clay S
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA
SCA125
ASSESSMENT OF GLOBAL LEFT VENTRICULAR FUNCTION WITH
TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY: COMPARISON OF
SPECKLE TRACKING WITH CONVENTIONAL INTRAOPERATIVE
MEASUREMENTS
Keller D1; Mackensen G1; Mahajan A2; Marcucci C1; Mathew J1; PhillipsBute B1; Podgoreanu M1; Swaminathan M1
DUMC1, Durham, NC, USA; UCLA2, Los Angeles, CA, USA
SCA126
IS WHOQOL-BREF QUESTIONNAIRE A RELIABLE AND VALID TOOL
FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF QUALITY OF LIFE IN PATIENTS WITH
CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE?
Montazeri A; Najafi M; Sheikhfatollahi M; Sheikhvatan M
Tehran Heart Center, Medical Sciences/University of Tehran,
Tehran, Iran
SCA127
ALTERED HEPARIN RESPONSIVENESS DURING
CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS IN PATIENTS WITH INFECTIVE
ENDOCARDITITS
Choi Y1; Hong SW1; Jung SM2; Lee JH1; Lee JY1
Yonsei University College of Medicine1, Seoul, Republic of Korea;
Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea;
Konyang University College of Medicine2, Daejeon, Republic of
Korea
SCA128
PREOPERATIVE SERUM ALBUMIN AS PREDICTOR OF OPERATIVE
MORTALITY AND MORBIDITY IN PEDIATRIC CARDIAC SURGERY
Del Real A; Estrada Y; Giraldo J; Montes F; Riaño D; Sepulveda Y
Fundación Cardio Infantil, Bogota, Cundinamar, Colombia
30th Annual Meeting & Workshops Objectives
2008 Annual Meeting
Learning Objectives
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 2008
Refresher Course Lectures
Ischemic preconditioning: Where are we after 10 years
Speaker: J Kersten
At the conclusion of this lecture the participant will understand
the scientific basis for ischemic preconditioning the its ability to
clinical practice
Cardiopulmonary Bypass Catastrophes: When Seconds Count
Speaker: G Gravlee
At the conclusion of this lecture the participant will have an appreciation of the treatment diagnostic and options available for
cardiopulmonary bypass catastrophes
Regional Anesthesia on the Frontline: Lessons learned from Iraq
Speaker: I Black
At the conclusion of this lecture the participant will have an appreciation of regional anesthesia techniques, utility of factor VII
and anesthesia hardships encountered in times of war.
Thrilla in Manila, the Aprotinin controversy continues
Speaker: D Mazer
At the conclusion of this lecture the participant will be updated on
the status of the literature supporting the use of Aprotinin
Renal Failure after Cardiothoracic Surgery
Speaker: M Stafford-Smith
At the conclusion of this lecture the participant will gain an appreciation of the significance of postoperative renal dysfunction
following cardiac surgery and ways to minimize it.
Pharmacoepidemilogy of Cardioprotective Medications: Implications for the Clinician
Speaker: M London
At the conclusion of this session the participants should be able
to: 1) Review the literature on indications for and efficacy of
Cardioprotective orally administered preoperative medications
(antianginals, antihypertensives, statins and antiplatelet agents)
in general medical populations using large scale pharmacoepidemiologic analyses and practice guidelines. 2) Consider the
implications for individual clinicians performing a preoperative
anesthesia assessment focusing on vascular, thoracic and cardiac
surgery. 3) Consider the implications for hospitals and health care
organizations of compliance with (or not) such information. 4)
Correlate such data with smaller perioperative studies used for
perioperative guideline development.
THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 2008
Evidence-Based Practice
Moderators: D Mazer
Evidence based cardiology interventions (stent update)
Speaker: M Knudtson
At the end of this session, the participant will understand the latest evidence for percutaneous interventions including stenting,
and will learn about evidence based cardiologic interventions
that can affect the perioperative management of cardiovascular
patients.
Evidence based perfusion practice
Speaker: K Shann
At the end of this session the new paradigm of evidence-based
perfusion practice will be reviewed. A framework for interdisciplinary collaboration and the creation of the International Consortium for Evidence-Based Perfusion (ICEBP) will be discussed.
Evidence based transfusion practice
Speaker: C Koch
At the conclusion of this session, the participant will understand
the benefits and risks of allogeneic transfusion, and will understand the evidence for recent practice guidelines for transfusion of
blood products.
Evidence based monitoring
Speaker: H Grocott
At the conclusion of this session, the participant will learn about
different techniques for intraoperative monitoring of neurologic
function and understand the rationale for their use.
Session A: Professional Development: When Patient Care is
the Easy Part
Moderator: D Zvara
Dealing with the disruptive colleague: record keeping, counseling
and steps to dismissal
Speaker: S Barker
At the conclusion of this session, techniques for recognizing and
establishing appropriate guidelines for performance will be discussed for the disruptive employee. Steps toward dismissal will
be reviewed from an ethical and legal perspective.
Narcotic and substance abuse in clinical practice: How to recognize it and what to do about it
Speaker: K Turner
At the conclusion of this session the participant will learn the
clues suggesting substance abuse in the work place and the appropriate steps to create and implement an action plan to deal with an
impaired colleague.
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 23
Session B: DHCA - Strategies to Improve Outcomes after
Deep Hypothermic Circulatory Arrest
Moderator: A Cheung
At the conclusion of this session the participants should be able
to: 1) Understand the current controversies surrounding the safe
conduct of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest such as: a) what is
the safe duration of circulatory arrest? b) what is the optimal temperature for deep hypothermia? c) what is the best way to perfuse
the brain? d) how should cerebral metabolism be monitored? and
e) should pH be managed using alpha-stat or pH-stat? 2) Learn
the evidence from published clinical studies that support what the
best practices are for the conduct of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. 3) Learn what experimental evidence exists to support
what the best practices are for the conduct of deep hypothermic
circulatory arrest.
Session A: Contemporary Management of the Thoracic Surgical Patient
Moderator: K Turner
At the conclusion of this session, the participant will: 1) Understand respiratory physiology as it applies to the practice of anesthesiology; distribution and determining factors of ventilation
and perfusion in the normal, diseased and anesthetized lung, commonly used pulmonary function tests, anatomy of the bronchial
tree and ways of lung isolation 2) Understand pathophysiology,
treatment and prevention of acute lunch injury: determine role
of fluid perioperative fluid management as cause and preventive
measure; outline evidence based postoperative care in a patient
with acute lung injury. 3) Understand current trends in lung transplantation: review of donor and recipient selection; indication of
single vs. double lung transplant; perioperative management of
the patient presenting for lung transplantation; outcome studies
and future therapy options for end-stage lung disease.
Session B: CCAS: Adults with Congenital Heart Disease:
Overview, non-Echocardiographic Imaging and the Pregnant
Patient
Moderators: K Rouine-Rapp/C Ramamoorthy
An attendee of this session will be able to explain common congenital heart lesions. He/she will compare and contrast non-echocardiographic imaging technologies used to evaluate adults with
such lesions. In addition, he/she will assess a pregnant patient
with a single ventricle, plan her management, and estimate her
perioperative risk.
Overview of CHD
Speaker: H Holtby
Following this lecture the participant will describe the most common congenital heart lesions. He/she will recognize associated
defects and summarize the physiology associated with lesions
discussed. A “classic” echocardiographic image will be included
for each lesion to enable the participant to visualize the congenital defect.
Non-echocardiographic imaging technologies
Speaker: F Chan
Following this lecture, the participant will be able to explain nonechocardiographic imaging technologies used currently to evaluate adult patients with CHD. He/she will list the indications for
24 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
the use of MRI and MRA to evaluate these patients and anticipate
information provided by non-echocardiographic technologies
discussed.
The pregnant patient with a single ventricle
Speaker: S Sundar
Following this lecture the participant will define consensus recommendations for the care of a pregnant patient with a single
ventricle. He/she will use these recommendations to choose the
most appropriate location for the pregnant patient with a single
ventricle to deliver her baby. He/she will discuss the options of
her anesthetic care provider and assess her lesion-specific perioperative risk.
Session A: Gender Issues in Cardiovascular Medicine - Why
can’t women be more like men?
Moderator: M Brady
At the conclusion of this session, participants will be able to:1)
Summarize the differences between the female and male profiles
of patients presenting for coronary artery bypass grafting. Specifically, participants will be able to recognize the extent to which
these differences are related to gender per se, individual risk factors, or the methodology behind evaluating these differences. 2)
Identify the differences in outcome between men and women in
terms of the short and long term benefits of coronary artery bypass grafting. In addition, participants will be able to summarize
the reasons why these differences occur. 3) Better understand the
current controversies of estrogen replacement therapy in cardiovascular surgery including its effect on perioperative risk, short
and long term outcome, and the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic responses to perioperative and intraoperative medications.
Session B: Pharmacology: Novel Pharmacology for Cardiac
Anesthesia
Moderators: A Fox/J Takeda
At the conclusion of this session, participants will be able to: 1)
understand the evidence for and against using propofol for myocardial protection in cardiac surgery. 2) understand the evidence
from published clinical studies regarding the efficacy of both
inhaled milrinone and prostacyclin for treating perioperative pulmonary hypertension and to review the advantages and disadvantages of these therapies as compared to inhaled nitric oxide and
intravenously administered pulmonary vasodilators. 3) learn what
the evidence shows regarding the pros and cons of perioperative
ACE-inhibitor and angiotensin receptor blocker use with cardiovascular surgery.
Session C: Crazy Stuff and Wild Times
Moderator: K Rehfeldt
At the conclusion of this session, participants will be able to
evaluate the potential benefits as well as the limitations inherent
to minimally invasive surgical approaches to cardiovascular diseases. Also, participants will be able to review the current status
of percutaneous treatments available for coronary artery and aortic valve disease.
OPCAB revisited: Is there really any benefit?
Speaker: D Cheng
At the conclusion of this lecture, participants will be able identify
the potential benefits of coronary surgery without cardiopulmonary bypass. Also, participants will review the data related to
graft patency following OPCAB procedures.
Coronary stents: Are we going back to bare-metal?
Speaker: H Ramikrishna
At the conclusion of this lecture, participants will understand the
rationale for the placement of drug-eluting coronary stents. In addition, the participant will recognize the risks of stent thrombosis
and develop a framework for the perioperative management of
patients who have undergone coronary stent procedures.
Percutaneous aortic valve replacement: Is this the way of the future or the way out future?
Speaker: R Savage
At the conclusion of this lecture, the participant will understand
the current status of percutaneous aortic valve replacement. In
addition, the participant will recognize which patients might
benefit from the procedure and how echocardiography is used to
evaluate the outcome in the cath lab.
FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 2008
Monograph Session: Medically Challenging Patients Undergoing Cardiothoracic Surgery
Moderator: N Cohen
This panel will include a discussion of selected underlying medical conditions and their impact on the perioperative management
of patients undergoing cardiothoracic surgery. The discussion
will highlight the clinical issues posed by these conditions and
define strategies to address them.
Session A: Contemporary Issues in Vascular Surgery
Moderator: B Donahue
After this session, the participant should be able to: Discuss
epidemiology of major vessel vascular disease and the general
surgical approaches to its management. Identify criteria for selection of endovascular vs open techniques. Describe an algorithmic
approach to perioperative management of the vascular surgery
patient. Discuss current literature on management of both carotid
and coronary vascular disease. Provide rationale for the use of
TEE in major vascular surgery and endovascular stent procedures.
Anesthesia and the endovascular stenting patient
Speaker: M Andritsos
After this presentation, the participant should be able to: Discuss
patient selection for endovascular stenting of abdominal and thoracoabdominal aneurysms. Discuss the indications for endovascular stent-grafts in abdominal and thoracoabdominal aneurysms.
Compare anesthetic techniques and address considerations for
endovascular stenting of abdominal and thoracoabdominal aneursysms. Compare morbidity rates following endovascular and
open procedures.
Carotid disease and CABG: recent data on surgical timing and
outcome
Speaker: J Ellis
After this presentation, the participant should be able to: Describe
the epidemiology for concordance of carotid artery disease and
coronary artery disease. Describe the mechanisms and risk of
cerebrovascular accident following cardiopulmonary bypass.
Compare on-pump and off-pump CABG for neurological outcome. Compare staged to combined procedures for treating combined carotid-coronary disease. Manage patients for carotid angioplasty and stenting and/or percutaenous coronary intervention
and/or minimally invasive coronary bypass surgery. Describe use
of TEE and epi-aortic scanning to detect aortic atherosclerosis
Evidence-based perioperative evaluation in vascular surgery patients
Speaker: A Ochroch
After this presentation, the participant should be able to: Discuss
the current standard for assessment of cardiac risk. Review the
impact on perioperative preparation on postoperative renal function. Outline a cost effective preoperative testing regimen. Analyze the appropriate use of consultants.
The use of ultrasound during vascular anesthesia: from line
placement to LV assessment
Speaker: G Hartman
After this presentation, the participant should be able to: Understand the indications and applications of surface ultrasound for
vascular access, including central venous, peripheral venous and
arterial cannulations. Discuss the utility of TEE for non cardiac
cases, specifically patients undergoing vascular surgery. Develop
a better understanding of the pathophysiology than that afforded
by pulmonary artery catheterization. Discuss utility of TEE for
endovascular stent placement procedures
Session B: Anesthesia & Analgesia - Aprotinin in Cardiac Surgery and the FDA
Moderator: C Hogue
At the conclusion of this lecture the attendee will:1) Have an understanding of the safety monitoring of aprotinin by the FDA 2)
Be informed of the current standing of aprotinin for use in cardiac
surgery.
Session C: ASCCA/SCA Joint Session Critical Care 2008
Moderator: M Wall
At the conclusion of this session, the participant will: 1) Understand how intraoperative mechanical ventilation may affect
normal and abnormal lungs, and the role of intra-operative ventilation and acute lung injury; 2) Understand the role and current
controversies around vasopressin and steroid use in sepsis and
septic shock 3) Be exposed to the top critical care papers from
2007-2008 that are of interest to cardiothoracic and vascular anesthesiologists and intensivists.
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 25
Session A: HITT
Moderators: D Royston/C Koch
Incidence and methods of presentation of HIT
Speaker: C Carter
At the conclusion of this session the participants should be able
to: 1) Review the diagnostic criteria for suspicion of HIT based
on the various published guidelines (AACP Chest 2004/British
Society BJ Haematol 2006) and with particular reference to monitoring of platelet count the 4T’s system. 2) Discuss the various
tests available to confirm the diagnosis of HIT to include: Diamed
particle gel (results in 1-2 hrs); PF4 antibody testing (results in
days to weeks) Heparin induced platelet aggregation (not available in most centres); Serotonin release (research test unavailable
in nearly all centres). This section would include sensitivity and
specificity of these test systems.
Session: B: SAGA/SCA Joint Session: Controversies in Preoperative Evaluation of the Elderly Patient
Moderator: G. A. Rooke
By the end of the session, the participant should understand factors that increase risk of perioperative complications, especially
in older patients. The participant should also understand what
steps can be taken to prevent such complications as heart failure,
delirium, cognitive decline and myocardial infarction
Session C: SCA Debates: Workforce Paradigms in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesiology
Moderator: D Zvara
The SCA should recommend credentialing guidelines to hospitals
for CT Anesthesiologists
Speakers: G Gravlee/G Roach
By the end of the session, the participant will review the pros and
cons of credentialing guidelines of CT anesthesiologists. The
information will assist in developing local and regional guidelines
for care.
The SCA should recommend that low volume programs close
Speakers: M Chaney/ B Murphy
By the end of the session, the participant will review the pros and
cons of providing care in low volume cardiovascular centers. The
information will assist in developing local and regional guidelines
for care.
SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 2008
Ischemic MR
Moderators: S Lambert/S Reeves
At the end of the session, the participants will be familiar with the
pathophysiology and mechanism of ischemic mitral regurgitation.
They will better appreciate the challenges associated with the
echocardiographic evaluation and therapeutic decision making in
the operating room. Finally, they will have a good understanding
of the surgical management options in ischemic MR.
Understanding Ischemic MR
Speaker: D Rubenson
At the end of the session, the participant will better understand
the mechanism and pathophysiology of ischemic MR, as well as
the preoperative work up of these patients. They will understand
26 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
the functional and prognostic implications of MR in patients requiring coronary revascularization.
Intraoperative Evaluation of Ischemic MR
Speaker: S Shernan
At the end of the session, the participant will learn echocardiographic evaluation of ischemic MR, with an emphasis on the
special challenges associated with anesthetized patients. They
will become familiar with new diagnostic modalities available to
the clinician and they will understand the intraoperative decision
making process and the postoperative evaluation.
The Surgical Approach to Ischemic MR
Speaker: S Bolling
The participants will understand the various issues surrounding
the surgical management of ischemic MR, including when to repair or not to repair, various techniques used to address ischemic
MR and the literature to support them.
Session A: How’s Your Sugar, Daddy?
Moderator: F Beique
Intraoperative Glycemic Control: It Just Makes Sense!
Speaker: B Kohl
By the end of this discussion, the participant should be able to:
Understand the etiology of perioperative hyperglycemia in the
cardiac surgical patient 2)Summarize the pertinent literature regarding perioperative glycemic control 3)Incorporate the knowledge gained into a rational, ‘take-home’ intraoperative glycemic
control strategy
Intensive Insulin Therapy During Cardiac Surgery Does Not Reduce Perioperative Death or Morbidity
Speaker: M Abel
To convince the audience that aggressive control of blood glucose
during cardiac surgery may be more dangerous than helpful
Session B: Research: Multicenter Trials and Research Consortia: The Whole is Bigger Than the Sum of the Parts
Moderator: H Grocott
The participants will: 1) Gain an understanding of who are some
of the leading multicenter groups performing research in cardiovascular anesthesia and surgery; 2) Better understand the need for
large multicenter trials and how some of the important questions
in our specialty can only be addressed with these large consortia;
3) Understand some of the nuances of how a multicenter trial
group is organized, including their advantages, unique capabilities, as well intrinsic logistical and other difficulties.
Session A: The Forgotten Ventricle: Understanding Right
Ventricular Function
Moderators: B Drenger/M Stone
At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to:
1) Explain the physiology underlying normal right ventricular
function, 2) Describe the pathophysiology of right ventricular
failure, 3) Explain how transesophageal echocardiography can
be used to assess pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular
failure 4) Discuss the current medical management of pulmonary
hypertension 5) Discuss surgical options for the management of
right ventricular failure
SUNDAY, JUNE 22, 2008
Issues in Blood Banking That Impact Outcomes: Leukoreduction
Depletion, Female Plasma Donors: What’s the Data?
Speaker: G Growe
There are changes in blood banking that impact the blood product
administered in the perioperative period. The objective of the session is to become aware of the rationale for changes as they relate
to blood products and patient outcomes. At the conclusion of the
session the participation should be able to understand: 1) The rationale for the practice of leukocyte depletion of blood products;
2) The data on patient outcomes associated with non-leukocyte
depleted blood products; and 3) The rationale for the practice excluding of female plasma donors.
Headaches, Heart Aches and Hangovers: A rapid fire case
based TEE conference on the images that drive us all crazy
Moderators: Maslow/Cheung
The objectives of this Post SCA Party session are to: Present
and discuss the management of an array of challenging cardiac,
thoracic, and vascular cases. The audience will be encouraged to
actively participate in the evaluation, planning, and management
of such patients. The presentations will include available laboratory and imaging data pertinent to each case. Literary references
applicable for each of the cases will be cited.
Age of Red Cells: Does Shelf Life Matter?
Speaker: C. D. Mazer
There are a number of hemorheological changes that occur with
red blood cells as the duration of storage increases. Some of these
changes are time-dependent, others are not. At the conclusion
of this session the participants should be able to: 1) To review
hemorheological properties associated with red blood cells as the
red cell unit shelf life increases. 2) To critically evaluate current
data relating patient outcomes to age of the red cell product.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 2008
Red Cell Alternatives: Are We Any Closer or Just One Day Older?
Speaker: B Spiess
Rationale for finding an alternative to the donor red blood cell are
many and relate to economics, limited resources, and associated
morbidity. While there is no currently available red cell substitute
in clinical practice, technological advancements have created a
potential for new substitutes in the future. At the conclusion of
this session the participants should be able to: 1) Provide background information and current status of research related to red
cell substitutes: hemoglobin-based oxygen and perfluorocarbonbased oxygen carriers. 2) Better understand limitations and complications related to the use of synthetic red cell alternatives. 3)
Provide information on the future direction of red cell substituteson the operating room shelf soon?
Emerging Recombinant Clotting Factors: When, in Whom, and
How Much
Speaker: L Shore-Lesserson
While recombinant clotting factors have been successfully developed, specific indications for use of these factors in patients
undergoing cardiovascular surgery is unclear. At the conclusion
of this session the participants should be able to: 1) Understand
the mechanism of action for recombinant factors 7 and 13. 2) Understand the clinical indications as well as side effects of factors 7
and 13. 3) Discuss clinical paradigms for the use of recombinant
factors in clinical practice.
Echo Jeopardy
Speakers: A Maslow/ P Panzica/R Savage/F Mahmood
To present and review wide range of echocardiographic images
and cases in a game format. At the end of the session the audience
will have reviewed a wide array of echocardiographic topics in a
game format. They will also have had some fun.
2008 Workshop
Learning Objectives
Workshop #1: Leveraging Your TEE Knowledge in the OR
Moderators: M Brady/J Miller
The Upset Stomach: How and when to incorporate epicardial
imaging into your practice.
Speaker: J Abernathy
At the conclusion of this session the participants should be
able to: Understand the principles, image/probe orientation
and views required to obtain a useful, diagnostic epicardial
echocardiographic examination. Verbalize the strengths and
limitations of epicardial imaging compared with transthoracic and
transesophageal echocardiographic imaging. Describe common
clinical situations when epicardial imaging should be used to
improve decision making in cardiac surgery
A Picture is Worth a 1000 Words: Clinically relevant
echocardiographic and anatomic correlations.
Speaker: F Mahmood
At the conclusion of this session the participants should be able
to: Visualize, identify and describe the location of structures
within the cardiac chambers. Use echocardiography to evaluate
extracardiac structures (e.g. intravascular tumors, etc.) and to
guide placement of extracardiac interventions (e.g. shunts, etc.)
Image and correctly identify the individual leaflets/cusps of all
cardiac valves
Quantitate or not to quantitate? Appropriate use of qualitative
Doppler imaging in clinical practice.
Speaker: W Whitley
At the conclusion of this session the participants should be able
to: Describe all necessary machine adjustments to obtain and
optimize a clinically useful color-flow Doppler image. Verbalize
clinical situations where qualitative Doppler imaging techniques
may not be accurate. Understand the differences between
individual color maps and describe when variance maps may
improve clinical diagnosis.
Great image…now what?
Speakers: J Abernathy/F Mahmood/W Whitley/M Brady/J Miller
At the conclusion of this session the participants should be able
to: Be familiar with the learning points associated with the case
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 27
examples shown. Verbalize techniques to yield clinical diagnoses
when only suboptimal or limited echocardiographic images are
obtained. Verbalize when a change in echocardiographic imaging
modality is necessary to produce clinical decisions
Workshop #2: Hands on Thoracic Anesthesia
Moderators: L Cooper/E Cohen
The first part of the workshop will review the methods of lung
separation (DLTs and Endobronchial Blockers and Thoracic
Epidural). The second part will provide a unique opportunity to
participate in the hands-on demonstration of the methods of lung
separation. Several stations with fiberscopes attached to video
cameras and mannequins with lung models, will be available
for demonstration and practice. These will include the insertion
and positioning of left and right-sided double lumen tubes.
Univent tubes, Arndt Endobronchial blocker, Cohen Flexitip
endobronchial Blocker and a Thoracic Epidural with the torso
model. Some Stations will include Tube Exchangers for difficult
airway.
Workshop #3: TEE: New and Review
Moderator: K Rehfeldt
At the conclusion of the workshop the participant will recognize
the importance of intraoperative echocardiography in the
anatomic and physiologic assessment of patients undergoing
cardiovascular surgery. In addition, participants will understand
how newer modalities such as tissue Doppler and strain rate
imaging complement the traditional echo exam. Furthermore,
participants will review the utility of intraoperative echo in the
evaluation of patients with mechanical assist devices.
Intraoperative assessment of the thoracic aortic: TEE and
epiaortic scanning
Speaker: M Kanchuger
At the conclusion of this lecture, participants will be able
to recognize a variety of pathologic conditions affecting the
thoracic aorta and understand their impact in patients undergoing
cardiovascular surgery. In addition, participants will understand
the indications and relative benefits of epiaortic ultrasound
imaging in the cardiac operating room.
Diastolic function: Intraoperative case studies
Speaker: M Swaminathan
At the conclusion of this lecture, participants will be able
to review the two-dimensional and Doppler components
used to assess diastolic function. Furthermore, participants
will recognize via case presentations, how TEE can be used
intraoperatively to assess diastolic function and left heart filling
pressures
Balloon pump and beyond: Echo assessment of assist devices
Speaker: T Burch
At the conclusion of this lecture, participants will understand
the utility of echocardiography in assessing patients who may
be candidates for mechanical circulatory support devices. Also,
participants will understand the role of intraoperative echo
in the evaluation of proper assist device function as well as
complications that may arise related to the use of these devices.
28 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
Introduction to tissue Doppler and strain rate imaging
Speaker: N Skubas
At the conclusion of this lecture, participants will understand the
basic principles behind tissue Doppler and strain rate imaging.
In addition, participants will recognize how tissue Doppler and
strain imaging complement the traditional echo examination in
the assessment of a variety of cardiac disease states.
Workshop #4: Adults with Congenital Heart Disease:
Arrhythmias, Sequelae and Recent Advances in non-Surgical
Management
Moderators: K Rouine-Rapp/C Ramamoorthy
Arrhythmias in adults with CHD
Speaker: E Mossad
Following this lecture the participant will describe the prevalence
of arrhythmias in adult patients with CHD. He/she will identify
specific CHD lesions associated with arrhythmias. Following
a case-based discussion of management, the participant will
construct an anesthetic plan for an adult patient with CHD
presenting for AICD in the cath lab.
Sequelae of CHD in the adult
Speaker: P Reynolds
Following this lecture the participant will identify specific
sequelae that occur following palliation or surgical correction
of a congenital heart defect. He/she will predict lesion-specific
sequelae and anticipate how such sequelae will alter patient
physiology.
Recent advances in the non-surgical management of CHD
Speaker: J DiNardo
At the conclusion of this lecture the participant will focus on
current interventional management of CHD lesions. Following
attendance, the participant will update his/her knowledge of
procedures used to treat adults with CHD, including percutaneous
pulmonary valve replacement, closure of ASD, VSD and PFO.
Workshop #5: Handheld Ultrasound for regional, vascular
and TTE
Moderators: K Glas/F Beique
At the conclusion of this lecture the participant shall be able to:
1) Identify vascular structures; 2) Distinguish nerves from other
anatomic structures; 3) Recognize and assess cardiac structures;
4) Apply the handheld US skills to achieve successful nerve
blockade; 5) Apply the handheld US skills to avoid vascular
structure complications. Each session shall have didactics
related to the use of US for vascular, regional and TTE (session
1 only) followed by hands on demonstrations during which the
participants identify structures with US on live models. No
blocks or vascular access will be performed during the sessions.
Workshop #6: Essentials of CPB
Moderator: M Swaminathan
At the conclusion of this session the participants should be
able to: Identify important considerations for initiation and
discontinuation of extracorporeal circulation. Delineate strategies
used during cardiopulmonary bypass to manage hematocrit,
hemodilution, temperature and effect neuroprotection. Discuss
cardiopulmonary bypass management of patients with heparin
induced thrombocytopenia. Describe cardiopulmonary bypass
management strategies in aortic surgery.
Workshop #7: TEE Advance Clinical Cases
Moderator: N Skubas/K Rehfeldt
Quantitation of Regurgitant Lesions
Speaker: A Perrino
At the conclusion of this lecture the participant will understand
the background of the Doppler techniques of proximal isovelocity
surface area (PISA), vena contracta, jet area, and continuity
equation, and review their application in the quantitative
evaluation of regurgitant valve lesions.
3-D: Imaging Tomorrow
Speaker: D Shook
At the conclusion of this lecture, the participant will comprehend
the physics of 3-, and 4-dimensional ultrasound and review the
applications of 3-dimensional imaging in valvular pathology and
ventricular function.
Challenging cases in prosthetic valve assessment
Speaker: A Cheung
At the conclusion of this lecture, the participant will review the
hemodynamic calculations used in the evaluation of prosthetic
valve function, the associated echocardiographic demonstrations
of intra- and para-prosthetic leaks as well as the unique lesions
associated with prosthetic valve endocarditis.
Echocardiographic findings in systemic disease
Speaker: K Rehfeldt
At the conclusion of this lecture, the participant will
understand the echocardiographic differences between adaptive
and pathologic ventricular hypertrophy, and review the
echocardiographic manifestations of infiltrative diseases, diabetes
mellitus, carcinoid, and radiation- and drug-induced valvular
disease.
2008 PBLD
Learning Objectives
Thursday June 19, 2008
1. Endovascular Stenting for TAA: To Drain or Not to Drain?
Albert Cheung, MD and Maged Argalious, MD
a. Become familiar with the current indications for lumbar CSF
drainage
b. Understand the complications associated with CSF drainage
and learn techniques to avoid them
c. Become familiar with practical techniques and pitfalls
associated with CSF drainage
2. Blue Sky at Night: Techniques for Managing Congenital
Heart Disease Patients for Non-cardiac Surgery
Emad Mossad, MD and Kathryn Rouine-Rapp, MD
a. Become familiar with common lesions seen in cyanotic and
acyanotic congenital heart disease
b. Become familiar with key anesthetic principles for the
management of these patients
c. Understand the indications for endocarditis prophylaxis in
patients with congenital heart disease
3. Stop The Heart, Not The Head: Managing Circulatory
Arrest for Aortic Arch Surgery
Annette Mizuguchi, MD, PhD and Al Perrino, MD
a. Discuss the current data on cerebral protection, and monitoring
in terms of impacting outcomes
b. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of anterograde and
retrograde cerebral perfusion
c. Become familiar with alternative cannulation techniques
4. It’s Just a Ten Minute Case: Providing Support for AICD
Testing
Benjamin Sohmer, MD and Mark Chaney, MD
a. Understand current nomenclature and indications for
resynchronization and defibrillator therapy
b. Discuss the anesthetic implications of inducing ventricular
fibrillation and techniques to improve chances for return to
sinus rhythm
c. Discuss difficult case scenarios and how to avoid common
pitfalls
5. Blood is Thicker Than Water: Making Sense of Current
Anticoagulants
Linda Shore-Lesserson, MD and Wanda Popescu, MD
a. Discuss the pharmacology and indications of platelet
inhibitors, direct anti-thrombins and fibrinolytic agents
b. Understand the indications for each of these agents
c. Learn techniques for managing patients receiving “nonreversible” anti-coagulants
6. I Can’t Put it Back: Managing Problems After Lung
Resection
Christopher O’Connor, MD and Katherine P. Grichnik, MD
a. Become familiar with the pathophysiology of hypoxemia
and right ventricular failure after lung resection and
pneumonectomy
b. Discuss the data on limiting fluid resuscitation in these patients
c. Understand the indications for nitric oxide in managing these
patients
7. Just Pull, It’ll Reach: Managing Patients for Tracheal
Resections
Javier H. Campos, MD and Andra Duncan, MD
a. Discuss the surgical indications for tracheal resection
b. Discuss anesthetic techniques and tools available to provide
ventilation to all lung segments
c. To understand advantages and disadvantages of early
extubation in these patients
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 29
8. Inflammation and Cardiac Surgery: Impact the Cascade,
Impact Outcomes?
David Collard, MD and Brian Birmingham, MD
a. Review the inflammatory cascade as it relates to cardiac
surgical procedures.
b. Discuss the role of interventions to reduce the inflammatory
response on outcomes in cardiac surgery.
Friday June 20, 2008
9. Cardiac Testing for Non Cardiac Surgery: An Evidencebased Approach
Susan Garwood, MD and Josh Stearns, MD
a. To understand the importance of thoroughly evaluating
patients with cardiovascular disease undergoing non cardiac
surgery.
b. To identify specific preoperative evaluative procedures that
are recommended for patients with cardiovascular disease
undergoing non cardiac surgery.
c. To discuss the impact of preoperative testing and perioperative
outcomes for patients with cardiovascular disease.
10. Robotic-Assisted MV Repair: Practical Management
Issues
Pierre LeVan and Robert Savage, MD
a. To understand the surgical mechanics and procedures involved
for robotic mitral valve repair.
b. To plan management strategies in terms of anesthetic
technique, invasive monitoring and echocardiographic
assistance for patients undergoing robotic assisted valve
repair.
c. To discuss complications related to robotic-assisted repair
procedures.
11. Off-Pump CABG: Management Issues that Impact
Outcomes
Jack Shanewise, MD and Hong Liu, MD
a. To gain an understanding of perioperative management
strategies in terms of anesthetic management, patient
monitoring, coagulation strategies and postoperative
management for patients undergoing off-pump CABG
procedures.
b. To be able to formulate a comprehensive anesthetic plan for
patients having off–pump CABG.
12. Who is at risk for SAM after MV repair?
Andrew Maslow, MD and Mohammed Minhaj, MD
a. To understand echocardiographic details of patient anatomy
and surgical procedure that places a patient ‘at risk’ for SAM
with left ventricular outflow tract obstruction following mitral
valve repair.
b. To be able to identify SAM with left ventricular outflow
obstruction following MV repair with intraoperative TEE.
c. To understand the impact of intraoperative management
maneuvers that may alter outcomes in patients with SAM
following MV repair.
30 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
13. Protecting the ‘Beans’: Strategies for Perioperative Renal
Protection in Cardiac Surgery
Robert Sladen, MD and Ted Alston, MD
a. To examine clinical factors which place a patient at high risk
for perioperative renal dysfunction.
b. To discuss the impact of perioperative renal failure on patient
outcomes following cardiac surgery.
c. To discuss interventional measures that may impact
perioperative renal function.
14. Carotid Revascularization: Are Stents Replacing Open
Procedures?
Galina Leyvi, MD and Joseph Miller, MD
a. To understand the risk and benefits for carotid artery stenting
procedures and open carotid revascularization.
b. To review recent outcome data examining morbid outcomes
following carotid stenting and open revascularization.
15. Echocardiography in the Endovascular Suite
Jill Morganstern, MD and Jacob Gutsche, MD
a. To recognize the utility of TEE in the evaluation of patients
undergoing endovascular procedures
b. To understand and recognize complications related to
endovascular procedures and the role of TEE in the detecting
complications during endovascular procedures
16. Cool Down, Warm Up: Temperature Management
Strategies and Outcomes in Cardiac Surgery
Hilary Grocott, MD and Michael D’Ambria MD
a. To understand the role temperature management in terms
of perioperative outcomes for patients undergoing cardiac
surgical procedures.
b. To develop management strategies for patients undergoing
cardiac surgical procedures that necessitate active patient
cooling and rewarming.
Saturday June 21, 2008
17. Atrial Fibrillation Following Cardiac Surgery: Do
Pharmacologic Interventions Impact Outcomes?
Joseph Mathew, MD and Nannette Schwann, MD
a. To understand the prevalence of postoperative atrial fibrillation
and impact on postoperative outcomes for patients undergoing
cardiac surgical procedures.
b. To discuss perioperative management approaches to reducing
the occurrence of postoperative atrial fibrillation.
c. To understand the data regarding the risk/benefit and impact of
perioperative amiodarone on the prevalence of postoperative
atrial fibrillation.
18. ARDS Update: Prevalence and Management Strategies
Michael Wall, MD and James Ramsay, MD
a. To discuss the prevalence and impact of ARDS on
perioperative outcomes
b. To understand and discuss the role of current clinical
management strategies and how they impact outcomes in
patients with ARDS
19. Is Cerebral Oximetry Useful in Cardiac Surgery?
Dean Andropoulos, MD and James DiNardo, MD
a. To review how cerebral oximetry works and what patient and
perioperative factors can influence cerebral oximetry readings.
b. To discuss the evidence for and against the utility of cerebral
oximetry for influencing postoperative outcomes in both adult
and pediatric cardiac surgical patients.
c. To discuss how perioperative surgical and anesthetic
management could be guided by cerebral oximetry measures.
22. Major Vascular Surgery (AAA, CEA) in Patients with
Coronary Artery Disease Requiring CABG. Which should
come first?
Davy Cheng, MD and Andy Ochroch, MD
a. To review the evidence for and against combining versus
staging CABG and vascular surgeries.
b. To become familiar with the unique perioperative implications
of combined versus staged procedure and to discuss related
anesthetic management strategies.
20. Carcinoid disease and Myasthenia Gravis: Disorders
with Unique Perioperative Implications for Cardiothoracic
Surgery
Marc Kanchuger, MD and Roman Sniecinski, MD
a. To understand the symptoms of carcinoid disease as well
as why these patients present for both cardiac and thoracic
surgery
b. To understand the perioperative management issues for the
cardiothoracic surgical patient with carcinoid disease.
c. To understand why thymectomy is frequently indicated in
patients with myasthenia gravis, and to become familiar with
perioperative management strategies.
23. Epicardial Echocardiography in Cardiac Surgery:
Indications and How to
Jutta Novalija, MD, PhD and Steven Konstadt, MD
a. Understand situations in which epicardial echocardiography
may be useful in terms of impacting surgical procedure and
patient outcomes.
b. Understand how to achieve and interpret standard views with
the epicardial echo probe.
21. Management Considerations for Axial Flow Ventricular
Assist Device Implantation: How are These Devices Different
From Pulsatile VADs?
Alina Grigore, MD and Michelle Capdeville, MD
a. To understand the differences between axial flow and pulsatile
VADs.
b. To become familiar with the different types of axial flow
devices, including the percutaneous Impella device.
c. To understand the perioperative implications of managing
patients with axial flow devices.
24. Ethics: Organ Donation after Cardiac Death: Should
Anesthesiologists be Involved?
Richard Wolman, MD and Michael O’Connor, DO, MPH
a. Understand the background for the formation of the ASA’s
statement on physician participation in donation after cardiac
death (DCD) and the new model guidelines for DCD policies.
b. Become aware of specific ethical issues involved in the use
of non-irreversibly cerebrally injured donors as DCD donors
(ALS, pulmonary cripples, etc).
c. Better understand patient management issues for critical care
anesthesiologists to keep these donors alive until withdrawal
of life-support and necessary management strategies to keep
the organs viable during withdrawal.
2008 Poster Session Objectives
Wednesday
Friday
Session A: Poster Discussion I – Vascular/Thoracic
Session C: Poster Discussion III – Perioperative Monitoring/
Echocardiography
At the conclusion of this small, interactive session, the attendee
will have been presented with the newest research for vascular and thoracic surgery. Furthermore, he/she will have time to
closely examine the research and question the physician scientist presenting the research. Moderators will lead attendees in a
focused discussion regarding each abstract.
Session B: Poster Discussion II – CPB
At the conclusion of this small, interactive session, the attendee
will have been presented with the newest research for cardiopulmonary bypass (technologies, personnel, conduct of blood,
transfusion, coagulation, organ protection). Furthermore, he/she
will have time to closely examine the research and question the
physician scientist presenting the research. Moderators will lead
attendees in a focused discussion regarding each abstract.
At the conclusion of this small, interactive session, the attendee
will have been presented with the newest research for echocardiography (TEE, surface echo, epi-aortic scanning) and perioperative monitoring technologies. Furthermore, he/she will have
time to closely examine the research and question the physician
scientist presenting the research. Moderators will lead attendees
in a focused discussion regarding each abstract.
Saturday
Session C: Poster Discussion IV – Experimental Circulation
At the conclusion of this small, interactive session, the attendee
will have been presented with the newest research for experimental circulation. Furthermore, he/she will have time to closely examine the research and question the physician scientist presenting
the research. Moderators will lead attendees in a focused discussion regarding each abstract.
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 31
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
June 18 - 22, 2008 • Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre • Vancouver, BC, Canada
WORKSHOP REGISTRATION
PLEASE PRINT/TYPE
Name_____________________________________________________________________MD______PhD______Other__________
Last First MI
Address______________________________________________________________________________________________________
City, State, Zip_________________________________________________________________________________________________
Office Phone (
)___________________________________________ Fax # (
)_______________________________
Email________________________________________________________________________________________________________
WEDNESDAY, June 18, 2008
Unless otherwise indicated, workshop enrollment is limited to 150 registrants. Only one workshop may be
attended during each time slot.
After May 8,
2008
___________
8:00-10:00 am
WORKSHOP 1: Leveraging Your TEE Knowledge
in the OR
$105
$_______________
___________
8:00-10:00 am
WORKSHOP 2: Hands-on Thoracic anesthesia
Enrollment limited to 75
$105
$_______________
___________
10:15 am-12:15 pm
WORKSHOP 3: TEE – New and Review
$105
$_______________
___________
10:15 am-12:15 pm
WORKSHOP 4: Adults with Congenital Heart
Disease: Arrhythmias, Sequelae and Recent
Advances in non-Surgical Management
$105
$_______________
___________
1:00-4:00 pm
WORKSHOP 5: handheld ultrasound
Enrollment limited to 75
$145
$_______________
___________
1:00-4:00 pm
WORKSHOP 6: Essentials of CPB
$145
$_______________
___________
4:15-7:15 pm
WORKSHOP 7: TEE AdvanceD Clinical Cases
$145
$_______________
$105
$_______________
TOTAL:
$_______________
SUNDAY, June 22, 2008
___________
8:00-10:00 am
Workshop 8: handheld ultrasound
Enrollment limited to 50
Please enter this total on page 34:
We regret there is no waiting list for sold out workshops or PBLDs.
32 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
June 18 - 22, 2008 • Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Center • Vancouver, BC, Canada
PBLD REGISTRATION
PLEASE PRINT/TYPE
Name_____________________________________________________________________MD______PhD______Other__________
Last First MI
Address______________________________________________________________________________________________________
City, State, Zip_________________________________________________________________________________________________
Office Phone (
)___________________________________________ Fax # (
)_______________________________
Email________________________________________________________________________________________________________
THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 2008 6:45-8:00 am Please indicate your first, second and third choice in the lefthand column.
TABLE 1
Endovascular Stenting for TAA: To drain or not to drain?
Albert Cheung, MD and Maged Argalious, MD
TABLE 2
Blue Sky at Night: Techniques for managing congenital heart disease patients for non-cardiac surgery
Emad Mossad, MD and Kathryn Rouine-Rapp, MD
TABLE 3
Stop The Heart, Not The Head: Managing circulatory arrest for aortic arch surgery
Annette Mizuguchi, MD, PhD and Albert Perrino, MD
TABLE 4
It’s Just a Ten Minute Case: Providing support for AICD testing
Benjamin Sohmer, MD and Mark Chaney, MD
TABLE 5
Blood is Thicker Than Water: Making sense of current anticoagulants
Linda Shore-Lesserson, MD and Wanda Popescu, MD
TABLE 6
I Can’t Put it Back: Managing problems after lung resection
Christopher O’Connor, MD and Katherine P. Grichnik, MD
TABLE 7
Just Pull, It’ll Reach: Managing patients for tracheal resections
Javier H. Campos, MD and Andra Duncan, MD
TABLE 8
Inflammation and Cardiac Surgery: Impact the cascade, impact outcomes?
David Collard, MD and Brian Birmingham, MD
FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 2008 6:45-8:00 am Please indicate your first, second and third choice in the lefthand column.
TABLE 9
Cardiac Testing for Non Cardiac Surgery: An evidence-based approach
Susan Garwood, MD and Josh Stearns, MD
TABLE 10
Robotic-Assisted MV Repair: Practical management issues
Pierre LeVan, MD and Robert Savage, MD
TABLE 11
Off-Pump CABG: Management issues that impact outcomes
Jack Shanewise, MD and Hong Liu, MD
TABLE 12
Who is At Risk for SAM After MV Repair?
Andrew Maslow, MD and Mohammed Minhaj, MD
TABLE 13
Protecting the ‘Beans’: Strategies for perioperative renal protection in cardiac surgery
Robert Sladen, MD and Theodore Alston, MD
TABLE 14
Carotid Revascularization: Are stents replacing open procedures?
Galina Leyvi, MD and Joseph Miller, MD
TABLE 15
Echocardiography in the Endovascular Suite
Jill Morganstern, MD and Jacob Gutsche, MD
TABLE 16
Cool Down, Warm Up: Temperature management strategies and outcomes in cardiac surgery
Hilary Grocott, MD and Michael D’Ambra, MD
SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 2008 6:45-8:00 am Please indicate your first, second and third choice in the lefthand column.
TABLE 17
Atrial Fibrillation Following Cardiac Surgery: Do pharmacologic interventions impact outcomes?
Joseph Mathew, MD and Nannette Schwann, MD
TABLE 18
ARDS Update: Prevalence and management strategies
Michael Wall, MD and James Ramsay, MD
TABLE 19
Is Cerebral Oximetry Useful in Cardiac Surgery?
Dean Andropoulos, MD and James DiNardo, MD
TABLE 20
Carcinoid Disease and Myasthenia Gravis: Disorders with unique perioperative implications for cardiothoracic surgery
Mark Kanchuger, MD and Roman Sniecinski, MD
TABLE 21
Management Considerations for Axial Flow Ventricular Assist Device Implantation: How are these
devices different from pulsatile VADs?
Alina Grigore, MD and Michelle Capdeville, MD
TABLE 22
Major Vascular Surgery in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease Requiring CABG. Which should come
first?
Davy Cheng, MD and Andrew Ochroch, MD
TABLE 23
Epicardial Echocardiography in Cardiac Surgery: Indications and how-to
Jutta Novalija, MD, PhD and Steven Konstadt, MD
TABLE 24
Ethics: Organ donation after cardiac death. Should anesthesiologists be involved?
Richard Wolman, MD and Michael O’Connor, DO, MPH
Thursday PBLD: r $45
Friday PBLD: r $45
Saturday PBLD: r $45
TOTAL:______________
Please enter this total on page 34. You will be assigned to only one PBLD table per day.
We regret there is no waiting list for sold out workshops or PBLDs.
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 33
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
June 18 - 22, 2008 • Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre • Vancouver, BC, Canada
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM REGISTRATION
Please complete the Workshop Registration and Problem Based Learning Discussion Forms
on pages 32 and 33 if necessary.
Please print or type on forms and return to:
SCA, 2209 Dickens Road, Richmond, VA 23230-2005
Phone (804) 282-0084 • Fax form to: (804) 282-0090 • Register online at: www.scahq.org
Name____________________________________________________________________________MD________PhD_______Other_______________
Last First MI
Address__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
City, State, Zip_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Office Phone (
)_____________________________________________Fax # (
)_ _________________________________________
Email ________________________________________________________________
Annual Meeting Registration
Save $75 (or $25 for residents and fellows) on your meeting registration if you join SCA now and register as a member.
After May 8
 SCA Member ...................................................................................................................$650.................................$_________
 Non-Member (MD, DO, PhD)+...................................................................................$900.................................$_________
 Resident/Fellow SCA Member**.............................................................................$250.................................$_________
 Resident/Fellow Non-member**............................................................................$300.................................$_________
 Perfusionists+.................................................................................................................$550.................................$_________
 Non-Physician (licensed to administer anesthesia)+........................................$750.................................$_________
 I plan to attend the Saturday Night Reception/Party ......................Complimentary..............................$0.00
 Saturday Night Reception/Party Guest #_____ @ ..........................................$70...................................$_________
**When accompanied by a letter from Department Chairperson, verifying Resident/Fellow status.
+Pre-registration for Workshops is available to SCA members only. If space is available, sessions will be opened to non-members.
Dietary Restrictions?_ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________
 Check
 VISA
 MasterCard
 American Express
If paying by check, check must be in US funds payable to SCA.
 Discover
Card No. _____________________________________________________________ Exp. Date_ __________________________________________
Signature_ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Name Printed on Card_ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Refund Policy: For the Workshops, Annual Meeting, PBLDs, and guest fee a full refund will be provided through May 8, 2008; an 80% refund will
be provided from May 9 through June 5, 2008. After June 5, 2008, the Society will not refund any registration fees. Refunds will be determined by
the date the written cancellation is received in the SCA's headquarters office.
Payment Total
Annual Meeting Total (this page) ......................................................................................$_____________
Workshop Total (from page 32)
......................................................................................$_____________
PBLD Total (from page 33)......................................................................................................$_____________
Grand Total...................................................... $ _____________
If you do not receive a confirmation letter from the SCA office within 30 days of submitting your
registration form, please call the office to confirm that your registration material has been received.
34 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists
30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
June 18 - 22, 2008 • Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre
DO NOT FAX THIS FORM TO SCA HEADQUARTERS
HOTEL RESERVATIO0N FORM: Please call, fax or e-mail the hotel of your choice.
The Fairmont Waterfront
Pan Pacific Vancouver Hotel
Ph: 1-800-441-1414
Ph: 1-800-937-1515
Ph: 604-691-1820 (Canada)
Ph: 1-800-663-1515 (Canada)
Fax: 604-691-1828
Ph: 604-662-8111
www.fairmont.com/waterfront/
Fax: 604-895-2469
www.panpacific.com/Vancouver/Overview.html
Please print or type
Name_______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Last
First MI
Preferred Mailing Address______________________________________________________________________________________
City, State, Zip , Postal Code_ ___________________________________________________________________________________
Office Phone (______)_ __________________________________ Home Phone (______)__________________________________
Email__________________________________________________ Fax # (______)________________________________________
Accompanying Person(s) Name(s)__________________________________________________ #Adults_ ______ #Children_ _____
Rates (All rates are in Canadian dollars):
The Fairmont Waterfront Pan Pacific Vancouver Hotel
r CDN $285 City View
r CDN $295 Inner Harbor View
r CDN $315 Water View
r CDN $325 Harbor Mountain View
The Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists has reserved a block of rooms at the above hotels. In order to receive the
special conference rate, advise the reservations agent at the hotel of your choice that you are attending the SCA Conference.
Reservations must be made prior to May 15, 2008 in order to receive the conference rates. Reservations received after this date
will be on a space available basis at regularly published rates. Please call, fax or email the hotel of your choice. In the event
your preferred hotel is not available, please call, fax or email your second choice. A 10% provincial tax and a 7% goods and
services tax will be added.
Please Reserve:
_______ Rooms My Arrival Date is:_________________ Arrival Time:__________________ My Departure Date is:______________
r Non Smoking r Smoking r King
r Double/Double
(Based on availability)
Special Requests:_____________________________________________________________________________________________
In order to guarantee your reservation, a credit card will be required.
r Please charge first night’s deposit to my:
r VISA r JCB
r MasterCard
r Enroute
r American Express
r Diners Club
Card No. _______________________________________________ Exp. Date_____________________________________________
Signature____________________________________ Name Printed on Card_____________________________________________
Cut-off date: May 15, 2008
Rooms and rates are subject to availability and change
Credit card charged upon receipt. Reservations cancelled 48 hour prior to arrival date will receive a full refund
if cancellation number is obtained.
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 35
Society of cardiovaScular aneStheSiologiStS
MeMberShip application
2209 Dickens Road, Richmond, VA 23230-2005
Phone (804) 282-0084 • Fax (804) 282-0090 • Email [email protected] • www.scahq.org
Name
(Last)
(First)
 MD  DO  PhD  Other
(MI)
Preferred Mailing Address
City
State/Country
E-mail address
Zip/PostalCode
OfficePhone
OfficeFax
Type of Practice:  Private  University  Government  Other
BoardCertified? Yes  No Specialty: _______________________ BoardEligible? Yes  No Specialty: ______________________
i aM applying for: (See eligibility reQuireMentS beloW)
 Active SCA
$175
 Associate SCA
$175
 SCA Career Scientist
$175
SCA/IARS/SPA/SAMBA/ISAP/STA
 Resident $75
 Active SCA/IARS
$210
 Associate SCA/IARS
$210
 SCA/IARS Career Scientist
$210
 Fellow $75
Residency/Fellowship Ends:
(mm/dd/yy)
/
/
AlreadyanIARSmember?
 Become a joint active SCA/IARS member for $70.  Become a joint associate SCA/IARS member for $70. (SCA will verify IARS membership)
eligibility reQuireMentS
active Members
associate Members
career Scientists
• Diplomate of the American Board of
Anesthesiology, or other international
equivalent.
• Possession of a degree of doctor of
medicine, bachelor of medicine, doctor
of osteopathy or other international
equivalent.
• Possession of a valid license to practice
medicine.
• Completion of an anesthesia residency
training program accredited by the
ACGME, the American Osteopathic
Association or other international
equivalent.
• Possession of a degree of doctor of
medicine, bachelor of medicine, doctor
of osteopathy or other international
equivalent.
• Possession of a valid license to practice
medicine.
Sca/iarS/Spa/SaMba/iSap/Sta
resident /fellow
• Career scientist actively involved
in research relating to thoracic or
cardiovascularanesthesiaorrelatedfields
of medicine.
• Possession of a doctor of philosophy
degree.
• Physician in an approved anesthesiology
training program accredited by ACGME,
the American Osteopathic Association or
other international equivalent.
• Possession of a degree of doctor of
medicine, bachelor of medicine, doctor
of osteopathy or other international
equivalent.
• Signature of director of resident/fellow
program required below.
MeMberShip includeS
Joint Sca/iarS Membership
• Subscription to Anesthesia & Analgesia
• Annual SCA Monograph
• Annual IARS review course lectures book
• Six issues of the SCA Newsletter
• Reduced fees for the annual meeting of both SCA & IARS
• Eligibility for workshops at the SCA annual meeting
• Availability of starter and mid-career grants from SCA and
research grants from IARS
• Access to member only section on SCA website offering
online membership directory and other members only
benefits
• Reporting of MOCA
Sca Membership
• Subscription to Anesthesia & Analgesia
• Annual SCA Monograph
• Six issues of the SCA newsletter
• Reduced fees for meetings
• Eligibility for workshops at the SCA annual meeting
• Availability of starter grants and mid-career from SCA
• Access to member only section on SCA website offering
online membership directory and online CME activities
• Reporting of MOCA
Signature, Director of Residency Program (Resident/Fellow Only)
 VISA
Joint Sca/iarS/Spa/SaMba/Siva/Sta
resident/fellow
 MasterCard  American Express  Discover
In addition to a monthly subscription to Anesthesia &
Analgesia, joint resident membership provides numerous
benefitsfromthesixparticipatingsocieties.ContactIARS
(216-642-1124 for information about additional member
benefits.)
Applicant Signature (All Applicants)
NO DEBIT CARDS ACCEPTED
 Check — If paying by check, check must be payable to SCA (US FUNDS ONLY), and mailed to SCA, 2209 Dickens Rd, Richmond, VA 23230-2005.
Card No. ____________________________________________________________ Exp. Date ________________________________________
Signature ________________________________________________ Name Printed on Card __________________________________________
36 • SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
Non-Profit
Postage
Society of Cardiovascular
Anesthesiologists
2209 Dickens Road
Richmond, VA 23230-2005
PAID
Permit #1430
Richmond, VA
Society of
Cardiovascular
Anesthesiologists
30th Annual Meeting & Workshops
June 18 – 22, 2008
Vancouver Convention & Exhibition Centre
Vancouver, British
Columbia, Canada
SCA 30th Annual Meeting & Workshops • 37