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Surgical management of the infant with coarctation of the aorta and ventricular septal defect
- Source :
- Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 20(1):176-180
- Publication Year :
- 1992
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 1992.
-
Abstract
- Clinical and cardiac catheterization data were collected from 39 infants with coarctation of the aorta and ventricular septal defect, 31 of whom were initially managed only by surgical repair of coarctation. Data were analyzed to determine mortality, morbidity, outcome and factors that might predict survival or the need for septal defect closure.Of the eight patients who did not require surgical treatment before 3 months of age, seven underwent coarctation repair alone at a mean age of 2.3 years. Of the 23 infants managed with coarctation repair alone, before age 3 months, 9 needed no additional surgical treatment and 6 required early and 8 required late repair of the ventricular septal defect. Seven infants underwent coarctation repair and simultaneous pulmonary artery bandnig and one eventually required debanding after spontaneous closure of the septal defect. The overall mortality rate in this series was 10.3% (mean follow-up time 5.7 years). Of 39 infants, 16 (41%) never required a second operation for ventricular septal defect closure.For patients who had only coarclation or coarctation repair with pulmonary artery banding at 1 cm/m2) on the basis of defect size at operative repair or echocardiographic or angiographic assessment. Defect size did not necessarily correlate with the need for operative repair. Stepwise multiple regression analysis revealed that increased right to left ventricular peak systolic pressure (p = 0.004) and decreased systemic venous oxygen content (p = 0.028) were significantly predictive of the eventual need for ventricular septal defect repair.Thus, most infants with coarctation of the aorta and ventricular septal defect do not require pulmonary artery banding or open heart closure of the ventricular septal defect at the time of coarctation repair. A significant number of infants will not require a second operation.
- Subjects :
- Heart Septal Defects, Ventricular
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Digoxin
medicine.medical_treatment
Coarctation of the aorta
Pulmonary Artery
Aortic Coarctation
Pulmonary artery banding
Internal medicine
medicine.artery
Medicine
Humans
cardiovascular diseases
Survival rate
Cardiac catheterization
Surgical repair
Heart septal defect
business.industry
Vascular disease
Infant, Newborn
Infant
medicine.disease
Prognosis
Constriction
Surgery
Survival Rate
Treatment Outcome
Pulmonary artery
Cardiology
Female
business
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Follow-Up Studies
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 07351097
- Volume :
- 20
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of the American College of Cardiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a6851e73a8557a5c210099a3b7be92d5
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0735-1097(92)90156-h