Title of article
Systemic obstruction in univentricular hearts: Surgical options for neonates
Author/Authors
Alain Serraf، نويسنده , , Stefano Conte، نويسنده , , François Lacour-Gayet، نويسنده , , Jacqueline Bruniaux، نويسنده , , Miguel Sousa Uva، نويسنده , , Régine Roussin، نويسنده , , Claude Planché، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages
8
From page
970
To page
977
Abstract
Background.
The surgical management for bridging patients with univentricular heart and systemic obstruction to a Fontan procedure remains controversial.
Methods.
Twenty-seven of 96 patients with univentricular heart and unobstructed pulmonary blood flow referred for surgical palliation were seen with systemic obstruction. Twenty-six were neonates with coarctation of the aorta in 21 and subaortic stenosis in 5. In 8 other patients, subaortic stenosis developed after initial pulmonary artery banding. Four different palliative procedures were performed: coarctation repair with pulmonary artery banding (group I, n = 15); Norwood or Damus-Kaye-Stansel or arterial switch operation (group II, n = 9); coarctation repair with pulmonary artery banding and bulboventricular foramen enlargement (group III, n = 2); and orthotopic heart transplantation with coarctation repair (group IV, n = 1).
Results.
The mortality rate was 34.3% (n = 12) for all patients, 53.3% in group I, 33.3% in group II (p = 0.003 versus group I), and 50% in group III. Nine patients (8 in group I and 1 in group II) had development of subaortic stenosis and underwent a subsequent procedure: Damus-Kaye-Stansel operation in 5, arterial switch operation in 3, and bulboventricular foramen enlargement in 1. Three had a concomitant or subsequent Fontan procedure and 2, a bidirectional Glenn procedure. In group II, 1 patient underwent a subsequent Fontan procedure and another, a bidirectional Glenn anastomosis. Six of the 8 patients with subaortic stenosis after initial pulmonary artery banding underwent a second stage consisting of a Damus-Kaye-Stansel procedure (n = 3), bulboventricular foramen enlargement (n = 2), or creation of an aortopulmonary window (n = 1). Three had a concomitant Fontan procedure and 2, a bidirectional Glenn procedure. Actuarial 4-year survival was 65.5% ± 8.4% (70% confidence limits) for all patients; it was 40% ± 13.3% in group I and 66.6% ± 16.3% in group II (p < 0.05).
Conclusions.
Initial management of patients with univentricular heart and systemic obstruction by Norwood-like procedures provides a better outcome. Success of the Fontan operation relies on the ability to provide timely relief of subaortic stenosis.
Journal title
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Serial Year
1995
Journal title
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Record number
612879
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