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Small study tests topical drugs on artery grafts during heart bypass surgery

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Small study tests topical drugs on artery grafts during heart bypass surgery
Photo by Navy Medicine / Unsplash

Researchers conducted a small, early-stage study to see if applying certain drugs directly to an artery graft during heart bypass surgery could improve blood flow. The study involved 46 patients who were having elective coronary artery bypass grafting. During surgery, a topical solution of either milrinone, nitroglycerin, or normal saline was applied to the left internal mammary artery graft, and blood flow was measured before and after application.

No specific results comparing the three groups are provided in the available information. We do not know if the drugs increased blood flow more than the saline solution, or by how much. The study also did not report any safety concerns or side effects from the topical application.

This was a small, single-measurement study with a very short follow-up of about 12 minutes. The lack of reported results means we cannot draw any conclusions about the effectiveness of the topical drugs. For patients, this means the findings are very preliminary and not ready to change surgical practice. More research with clear, reported results is needed to understand if this approach is helpful.

What this means for you:
A small study measured artery flow after topical drug application, but no comparative results are available yet.
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