Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 3 de 3
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
2.
J Am Coll Cardiol ; 47(10): 2065-73, 2006 May 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16697327

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: We sought to evaluate the mid-term outcome of hospital survivors with extracardiac Fontan circulation. BACKGROUND: Few data exist about the mid-term and long-term results of the extracardiac Fontan operation. METHODS: From November 1988 to November 2003, 221 patients underwent an extracardiac Fontan procedure as primary (9 patients) or secondary (212 patients) palliation, at a mean age of 72.2 months (range 13.1 to 131.3 months). A total of 165 of 193 early survivors underwent programmed noninvasive follow-up evaluations and at least one cardiac catheterization. RESULTS: The overall survival, including operative deaths, was 85% at 15 years. Freedom from late failure among hospital survivors is 92% at 15 years. A total of 127 of 165 survivors (77%) were in New York Heart Association functional class I. The incidence of late major problems was 24% (42 major problems in 36 of 165 patients): 19 patients had arrhythmias (11%), 5 patients had obstruction of the extracardiac conduit (3%) and 6 of the left pulmonary artery (3.5%), and 5 patients experienced ventricular failure (3%), leading to heart transplantation in 3 patients. Protein-losing enteropathy was found in two patients (1%). The incidence of late re-interventions was 12.7% (21 of 165 patients, including 15 epicardial pacemaker implantations). Four patients died (2.3%), two after heart transplantation. CONCLUSIONS: After 15 years of follow-up, the overall survival, the functional status, and the cardiopulmonary performance of survivors of the extracardiac Fontan procedure compare favorably with other series of patients who underwent the lateral tunnel approach. The incidence of late deaths, obstructions of the cavopulmonary pathway, re-interventions, and arrhythmias is lower than that reported late after other Fontan-type operations.


Subject(s)
Fontan Procedure , Heart Defects, Congenital/surgery , Cardiovascular Diseases/etiology , Cardiovascular Diseases/surgery , Cardiovascular Surgical Procedures , Child , Child, Preschool , Exercise Test , Exercise Tolerance , Follow-Up Studies , Fontan Procedure/adverse effects , Humans , Infant , Pulmonary Artery/surgery , Recovery of Function , Reoperation , Respiratory Function Tests , Survival Analysis , Treatment Outcome , Vascular Patency , Vena Cava, Inferior/surgery
3.
Cardiol Young ; 15(5): 477-80, 2005 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16164785

ABSTRACT

We measured resting and exercise haemodynamics, as well as 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure, so as to study the influence on development of hypertension in children after repair of coarctation by either construction of a subclavian flap or end-to-end anastamosis. The patients in both groups were studied a mean time of 13 years after surgery. Thus, we divided 43 children who had undergone surgical repair of coarctation, and who were not on antihypertensive therapy, into a group of 22 patients who had undergone subclavian flap repair, with a mean age of 14 plus or minus 2.6 years, and another group of 21 patients undergoing end-to-end anastomosis, with a mean age of 13.5 plus or minus 3.9 years. We examined blood pressure at rest and during exercise, along with the measurement of cardiac output using impedance cardiography, and during 24-hour ambulatory monitoring. We recorded systolic and diastolic blood pressures, pulse pressure, cardiac output and total peripheral vascular resistance at rest and at peak exercise. During ambulatory monitoring, we measured mean pressures over 24 hours, in daytime and nighttime, 24-hour pulse pressure, and 24-hour mean arterial pressure. Student's t test was used to judge significance, accepting this when p was less than 0.05. The group repaired using the subclavian flap showed significantly disadvantageous differences for diastolic blood pressure at rest, systolic blood pressure at peak exercise and for 24-hour systolic and diastolic blood pressure, 24-hour mean arterial pressure, and daytime and nighttime systolic blood pressure during ambulatory monitoring. Our findings suggest that, after repair using the subclavian flap in comparison to end-to-end anastomosis, patients show a higher incidence of late hypertension, both during exercise and ambulatory monitoring. The data indicate different residual aortic stiffnesses, these being lower after end-to-end anastomosis, which may be due to the greater resection of the abnormal aortic tissue when coarctation is repaired using the latter technique.


Subject(s)
Aortic Coarctation/surgery , Hypertension/etiology , Postoperative Complications , Adolescent , Adult , Anastomosis, Surgical , Aorta/surgery , Blood Pressure/physiology , Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory , Cardiac Output/physiology , Cardiac Surgical Procedures/methods , Child , Exercise/physiology , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Rest/physiology , Subclavian Artery/transplantation , Surgical Flaps , Treatment Outcome
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...