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1.
Rev. bras. cir. cardiovasc ; 33(3): 271-276, May-June 2018. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-958416

ABSTRACT

Abstract Objective: To identify main complications in outpatient follow-up, as well as factors before or during operation that may interfere in patient's evolution. Methods: Retrospective study of patients submitted to total cavopulmonary shunt with extracardiac conduit from 2000 to 2014 at the Hospital do Coração (São Paulo, Brazil) and who underwent clinical follow-up at this institution. Results: One hundred and fifty surgeries were performed and 59 patients maintained outpatient follow-up. The mean age of these patients at the time of surgery was 4.45 years (median of 45 months) and 70.2% of them were males. Among the patients undergoing outpatient follow-up, postoperative time at evaluation ranged from 10 days to 145 months; 30 (50.8%) patients had single left ventricle and 29 (49.2%) had single right ventricle (48.2% of these presented with hypoplastic left heart syndrome [HLHS]). Patients with single left ventricle had a higher percentage of reintervention-free survival, but without statistically significant difference. 40% of the patients had no complications and 35% of them presented with thrombosis at some point in the follow-up period, with ventricular dysfunction being the second most frequently found complication (15% of cases), mainly among patients with single right ventricle morphology (P=0.04). Between the patients currently under follow-up, 20 (35%) of them had been evaluated by ultrasonography and had some degree of hepatic congestion and/or hepatomegaly. 16.7% of the patients with such alteration had HLHS (P=0.057). Conclusion: Except for the right ventricular morphology, no other factor has been shown to interfere in late evolution after total cavopulmonary shunt.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Infant, Newborn , Infant , Child , Adolescent , Postoperative Complications/epidemiology , Heart Bypass, Right/adverse effects , Heart Bypass, Right/statistics & numerical data , Reoperation/statistics & numerical data , Time Factors , Brazil/epidemiology , Retrospective Studies , Follow-Up Studies , Morbidity , Statistics, Nonparametric , Heart Defects, Congenital/surgery
2.
Rev. méd. Chile ; 130(11): 1217-1226, nov. 2002. ilus, tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-340220

ABSTRACT

Background: During the last five years, 65 patients with univentricular heart have been treated surgically in our institution, according to a protocol of staged operations that have been previously reported. Aim: To evaluate the early and mid-term outcome of those patients that have completed their staging protocol by means of a Fontan procedure. Patients and Methods: Between April 1996 and June 2001, 23 patients (age 16 to 223 months) underwent a Fontan procedure, 15 with an intracardiac lateral tunnel technique and 8 with an extracardiac conduit. A retrospective review of their clinical, surgical, echocardiographic, angiographic and hemodynamic data was performed, trying to identify risk factors for both mortality and functional capacity (FC). Follow up was complete in all survivors. Results: Three patients died early after surgery (13.04 percent). Excessive pulmonary blood flow was a risk factor for early death (p= 0.03). One patient died at 14 months. Follow up was 29.9 months (1-63). For those who survived the operation, five years survival was 93.3 percent. The majority of patients are in FC I or II, with no related risk factors. Conclusions: Our current results are comparable with those of larger series. Patients reach good FC and mid-term survival, irrespective of type of single ventricle or the surgical strategy


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Child, Preschool , Female , Infant , Fontan Procedure , Heart Diseases , Heart Bypass, Right/statistics & numerical data , Postoperative Period , Disease-Free Survival , Heart Septal Defects, Ventricular , Ventricular Dysfunction/surgery , Hemodynamics
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