Monthly Archives: February 2015

Monthly Case: Early Graft Closure

Safe with notes
The case was of a middle aged man who died suddenly two weeks after a surgery. One of the photographs shows the cause of death. The other photograph from the same patient shows a similar process, but was not the cause of death.

Case discussion:
The photographs show grafts to the heart. These were grafts from a coronary artery bypass procedure. The grafts came from a vein in the leg (saphenous vein) and were attached to the heart to allow blood flow around blocked coronary arteries. The grafts have been cut open to see along the length of their insides.

The bottom graft shows the cause of the death. This graft is completely blocked by the clot seen at the right. The clot appears as a red tube inside the graft. It blocked blood flow from getting completely through the graft to where it needed to go – the heart muscle. It was as though the heart was functioning without this graft at all.

This was a sick heart with a recent serious heart attack that prompted the bypass surgery emergently. The graft was critical to the patient’s health and life.  Without the open graft and the blood flow to the heart, the patient died.

The top photographs shows a small amount of clot healing onto the inside of the graft.  It’s not enough clot to block the blood flow in the graft, but is the same process. This clot is brown and not red because it is starting to heal and scar, which changes the color.

To the left of the clot in the top photo is a hole surrounded by small sutures.  This is called a “side anastomosis.”  This graft was used twice.  Blood flow passed through the side anastomosis to a blood vessel there; and blood flow passed through the end of the graft (all the way at the right) to a blood vessel there.  Often, grafts can be used to bypass more than one blocked vessel.

Early graft closure from clot (thrombosis) is a known, but rare complication of coronary artery bypass grafts.  It’s unrelated to the technique of the surgery or any intraoperative factors, but just a part of the body’s reaction that can sometimes happen to the graft itself.

Meaning to the family:
In this case, while it was helpful to know that the graft closure was “no fault” of the surgeon, the patient had tell-tale signs of trouble during recovery after hospitalization (shortness of breath and fainting) that were not attended to. This was a complicated post-operative story to sort though. The autopsy was helpful to the family by clarifying the cause of death and its relationship to natural processes, the surgery and post-operative care.

Should you say “I’m sorry for your loss”?

Sorry for your loss

This question – whether or not it is appropriate to say “I’m sorry for your loss” to a grieving family member — is one I’ve heard explicitly raised by a variety of professionals. For example, a resident tasked with providing a family with autopsy results was simply unsure of how to begin the conversation; and if it was “ok” to empathize. Another worried whether extending condolences was too much of an invitation to deal with a family’s difficult feelings of grief. A funeral director caught off guard by a family’s sharp response (“No you’re not! You just want my money!”) questioned her willingness to do what had come naturally and switched over — forevermore — to “you have my condolences.”

The latter examples are more complex, so, for now, let’s talk about the first. We’ll come back to the others in a later post.

My view on the general issue is as follows:

In my line of work — as an autopsy pathologist who works closely with families — I always let the family know that I’m sorry for their loss. And I say this right away the first time we speak. I do this because I am sorry for their loss. It’s that simple. The human connection is the most important part of the interaction.

Holding back the words has more to do with the speaker’s own discomfort or unfamiliarity with death and grief than any rule about “how grief works” for the family.

Here’s a bit of context from my world.

Families who call me for an autopsy (the same ones speaking with you for whatever reason) have often spent weeks or months advocating or fighting within the health care system. And, of course, their loved one has died despite their and everyone’s efforts. When they call me, they may be expecting the fight to continue — I am (another) doctor. By saying “I’m sorry for your loss,” I also let them know right away that I’m on their side. It’s because I actually am.

Even separate from any difficult relationships they may have had within the health care system, the family will also have many feelings surrounding their loved one. They may be feeling angry because of perceived missteps in the treatment; guilty that they were unable to care for a headstrong or even self-destructive loved one; or feeling lost if the death was sudden. The quest for answers through an autopsy is always part of an effort to fill in emotional pieces of a story. Did that uncaring physician miss a diagnosis as I suspected? Should I have pushed harder for that x-ray? Did my husband suffer before I found him?

Given the often problematic relationships, the self-doubts, and the huge personal hole that can be left by a loss, families in grief welcome kindness. There is so much room among grieving families for simple, undemanding kindness. “I’m sorry for your loss” dropped into the well of grief splashes deep, soothing and welcome ripples. There’s so much power in the small gesture.

To the uncertain resident, I would say give yourself credit for wanting to reach out. Go ahead and say the words. You’ll find the family will really appreciate it.

The other two examples — the resident who worried about getting “too much family” by reaching out and the funeral director who got “too much family” in the form of a rejection — are really exceptions. The solution there has to do with believing it when you say “I’m sorry for your loss.” But stay tuned for for that discussion at a later point.

In the mean time, if you know a family or individual in grief, don’t hesitate. “I’m sorry for your loss” can be ice cream to the sore throat of grief. Even a small scoop can soothe.