Objective: To describe the experience of a cardiovascular surgery center through quality indicators in the care of patients following coronary artery bypass graft surgery without extracorporeal circulation.Materials and method: A descriptive observational retrospective cohort study at a single center.The information was obtained from our database of patients undergoing cardiovascular surgery.All patients over 18 years of age who underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery without extracorporeal circulation were included.The quality indicators analyzed were number of reoperations, prolonged mechanical ventilation, cerebrovascular disease and low cardiac output syndrome in the postoperative period, acute kidney injury, atrial fibrillation, and risk-adjusted mortality.Results: During the study period from May 2015 to May 2019, 274 patients underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery without extracorporeal circulation.Males predominated (69.3%), as did ages between 45 and 65 years (52.9%), and the most frequent comorbidity was arterial hypertension (76.3%).The quality indicators were reoperation for bleeding, 4 cases (1.5%), prolonged mechanical ventilation, 20 cases (7.3%), stroke, 1 case (0.4%), low cardiac output syndrome, 10 cases (3.6%), acute kidney injury, 28 cases (10.2%), and atrial fibrillation, 29 cases (10.6%).Overall mortality in the ICU was 3 patients (1.1%).Conclusions: The results obtained provide important information about quality indicators recorded in a regional cardiovascular surgery center in the postoperative period after myocardial revascularization surgery without the use of extracorporeal circulation.The creation of a national multicenter database is proposed for the registration and comparison of postoperative cardiovascular indicators.