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Hemodynamic and electrophysiologic studies were performed in 11 children with dextrotransposition of the great arteries an average of 26 months after the interatrial baffle procedure and, in 2 patients, additional closure of a ventricular septal defect. All children are clinically well. Right to left shunts ranging from 28 to 63 percent of systemic blood flow were found at the superior vena caval-baffle junction in four children. The superior vena caval-baffle gradient averaged 7 mm Hg (range 0 to 22). Right ventricular stroke work index averaged 39 g-m/beat per m2 and right ventricular end-diastolic pressure 9 mm Hg. These values were not significantly different from the values for the systemic left ventricle in a comparable group of normal children (average left ventricular stroke work index 45 g-m/beat per m2 and average left ventricular end-diastolic pressure 8 mm Hg). Cardiac index, heart rate and arteriovenous oxygen difference were also normal. No child has complete heart block. His bundle recording demonstrated normal H-V intervals (range 27 to 40 msec); 4 of the 11 had a prolonged A-H interval. Left ventricular systolic pressure was less than 40 mm Hg in all but two children who had significant subpulmonary stenosis. Pulmonary vascular resistance averaged 1.9 units and was decreased in all children. We conclude that up to 37 months postoperatively, despite some residual abnormalities, the clinical and hemodynamic condition of these children is excellent.
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PMID:Postoperative hemodynamic and electrophysiologic evaluation of the interatrial baffle procedure. 12 1

A noninvasive technique, i.e., the intravenous injection of a bolus of 99mTc, allows one to visualize the wall motion and the stroke volume distribution of the left ventricle after myocardial infarction. Thus, in the first weeks after infarction, it is possible 1) to answer the question of the function of the involved wall segment, 2) to detect early complications, 3) to follow-up the course 4) to estimate the patient's functional status for treatment more accurately and 5) to control the result of treatment. Furthermore, one can calculate the ejection fraction, demonstrate other zones of reduced systolic function and evaluate the degree of congestion in the lung and involvement of the right ventricle. The study is based on 42 examinations in 35 patients with proven myocardial infarction. Only three patients presented normal systolic wall motion. In the remaining 32 patients there was hypokinesia of the infarcted segment partly combined with some temporary dyskinesia during ventricular contraction or with localized akinesia. Three patients had an aneurysm, two a ventricular septal defect and 19 some degree of mitral reflux, in seven congestive heart failure was present. Certain technical requirements are essential for this noninvasive technique. They are discussed in detail. Examples of wall motion and stroke volume distribution of a normal left ventricle, anterior and posterior infarction and an aneurysm are illustrated.
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PMID:[Noninvasive demonstration of wall movement and stroke volume distribution of the left ventricle after myocardial infarction (author's transl)]. 13 Oct 77

Our study was undertaken to determine the type, incidence, and functional significance of residual anomalies in patients who have undergone corrective repair for tetralogy of Fallot. We reviewed data from cardiac catheterisations performed on 132 survivors. A significant residual ventricular septal defect was present in only 12 patients. Resting right ventricular systolic pressure was less than 80 mmHg in 100 patients and ranged from 80 to 150 mmHg in the other 32 patients. Thirty-five patients were studied both at rest and during supine exercise. In most patients, the relation between oxygen consumption and cardiac output was normal during exercise. The stroke index and right ventricular end-diastolic pressure at rest and on exercise were compared in 34 patients. Seventeen showed a normal response to exercise. In the other 17 patients, right ventricular end-diastolic pressure rose on exercise; in 5 of these the stroke index fell during exercise, indicating abnormal myocardial response. Our studies indicate the frequent occurrence of residual abnormalities, even in patients who appear asymptomatic, after total correction of tetralogy of Fallot.
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PMID:Postoperative haemodynamics in tetralogy of Fallot. A study of 132 children. 42 55

During a six-year period, 46 severely symptomatic infants (average age, 5.1 months) underwent correction of ventricular septal defect (22 patients), total anomalous pulmonary venous connection (13 patients), and complete atrioventricular canal (11 patients), with the use of surface cooling to 20 degrees C. Cardiac repair was performed during circulatory arrest, and rewarming was performed with a pump oxygenator. Ten patients undergoing repair of ventricular septal defects were studied hemodynamically at 21 degrees C, before repair and at 37 degrees C after rewarming. Heart rate, left ventricular systolic pressure, maximum dp/dt, cardiac index, stroke work, and oxygen consumption were reduced substantially at 21 degrees C. Systemic vascualr resistance was increased at 21 degrees C. All changes were reversible with repair and rewarming. A protocol for hemodilution and crystalloid volume loading was devised to maintain urine output after early patients were noted to demonstrate renal dysfunction. With this protocol, survival rates were 89% for patients with ventricular septal defects, 67% for those with atrioventricular canal defects, and 85% for those with total anomalous pulmonary-venous connection.
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PMID:Surface cooling (20 degrees C) and circulatory arrest in infants undergoing cardiac surgery. Results in ventricular septal defect, complete atrioventricular canal, and total anomalous pulmonary venous connection. 67 92

Intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation (IABP) was used in 20 patients with acute myocardial infarction and cardiogenic shock, after four hours of drug treatment. In all instances the abnormal haemodynamic state had been demonstrated. Four patients were successfully treated and finally discharged home. In two with post-infarction ventricular septal defect and cardiogenic shock, IABP also successfully reversed the shock state, while in seven the shock state was reversed but they died 2-8 days after IABP had been stopped. IABP failed in seven patients who died during its application. In those in whom IABP failed there had been no significant fall in pulmonary-artery pressure and no significant increase in stroke volume. The post-mortem examinations demonstrated that cardiogenic shock was irreversible where more than 50% of the left ventricular myocardium had been infarcted.
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PMID:[Treatment of cardiogenic shock after acute myocardial infarction with intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation (author's transl)]. 126 28

Long-term systemic ventricular function at rest and during supine bicycle exercise was studied in 12 patients with atrioventricular discordance (AVD group) using multigated radionuclide blood pool imaging. For comparison, similar measurements were made in eight children (control group). The mean age at the exercise test was 12.3 years in AVD group and was 14.8 years in the control group. In AVD group, ages at the operation ranged from three to 21 years (mean 12.3 years), and the exercise test was performed from one to 9.8 years after the operation (mean 5.3 years). The operative procedures in AVD group consisted of closure of the ventricular septal defect in 11 patients, extracardiac conduit between the left ventricle and the pulmonary artery in nine patients, postero-lateral left ventricular outflow reconstruction in two patients, tricuspid annuloplasty in one patient, and tricuspid valve replacement in one patient. Exercise tolerance of AVD group was less than that of the control group. Heart rate and blood pressure were significantly increased during exercise in both groups. In the control group, end-diastolic count index (EDCI) (= end-diastolic volume) remained unchanged and end-systolic count index (ESCI) (= end-systolic volume) decreased during exercise. In contrast, both EDCI and ESCI were decreased in AVD group. As a consequence, systemic right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF) increased during exercise in the control group, but remained unchanged in AVD group. Although stroke count index (SCI) (= stroke volume index) did not increased during exercise in AVD group, output count index (OCI) (= cardiac index) increased with the increase of heart rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Assessment of long-term systemic ventricular function after the surgical repair in patients with atrioventricular discordance]. 140 63

Based on the phase difference method as described by Nayler et al. we developed a gradient-echo sequence, which refocuses flow related phase shifts even for infants with their higher peak velocity, higher acceleration and faster heart rates. A repetition time (TR) of 15 ms provides a high temporal resolution for dynamic studies. Modification of the flow-rephasing gradient-echo sequence in slice select direction leads to a defined phase shift and the resultant phase difference images allow blood flow measurements in the great arteries and the calculation of blood volume per heart cycle (flow volume) to assess left and right ventricular stroke volume. This can also be achieved by calculation of the ventricular volume from contiguous slices of the whole heart, but, this in excessive measuring times. Both methods were applied in 6 examinations of children with congenital heart diseases (1 pulmonary sling, 1 coarctation of the aorta, 1 ventricular septal defect, 3 atrial septal defects). The age of the patients ranged from 3 months to 13.4 years (mean age 4.9 years). The regression analyses of both methods show a high correlation for systemic flow (y = -0.98 + 1.08 x, r = 0.99, SEE = 2.59 ml) and for pulmonary flow (y = -1.40 + 0.96 x, r = 0.99, SEE = 4.70 ml). The comparison of flow calculated Qp:Qs ratio and chamber size calculated Qp:Qs ratio with data obtained by heart catheterization show also a regression line close to the line of identity (y = -0.01 + 1.04 x, r = 0.98, SEE = 0.15 and y = 0.28 + 0.96 x, r = 0.81, SEE = 0.47, respectively).
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PMID:Noninvasive blood flow measurement and quantification of shunt volume by cine magnetic resonance in congenital heart disease. Preliminary results. 159 9

We reviewed our clinical experience in 24 patients with cardiac myxoma. There were 8 males and 16 females, their ages ranged from 14 to 73 (mean, 48) years. Prior to echocardiographic examination, cardiac myxoma was suspected clinically in only 2 cases. The remaining patients were initially diagnosed as having mitral valvar disease (9 cases), infective endocarditis (3 cases), congestive cardiomyopathy (4 cases), pericardial effusion (1 case), systemic embolism of unknown cause (1 case), cerebrovascular accident (2 cases), ventricular septal defect (1 case) and Ebstein's malformation (1 case). The tumor was in the left atrium in 16, in the right atrium in 2, in the biatrium in 1, while one was in the right ventricle and peripheral arterial occlusion had been produced by myxoma without demonstrable cardiac tumors in the other two. Twenty-two patients underwent open heart surgery for excision of myxoma and there was no surgical mortality. Abdominal embolectomy was carried out in 2 patients; one of these 2 patients survived and 1 died. Follow-up for a mean period of 32 months (range 2 to 99 months) was possible in in 18 patients with no evidence of recurrence. We conclude that cardiac myxoma may mimic many cardiovascular diseases, so a high index of suspicion is important for its diagnosis. Echocardiography is the most useful diagnostic screening tool.
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PMID:Cardiac myxoma--clinical experience in 24 patients. 228 91

Shone's anomaly, a congenital cardiac malformation, consists of multiple levels of left heart obstruction including supravalvar mitral ring, parachute mitral valve, subaortic stenosis, and coarctation. The prognosis for patients with Shone's anomaly is poor. To assess operative results and late outcome, we reviewed the records of 30 consecutive patients seen with Shone's anomaly at our institution between 1966 and 1989. Anatomical diagnoses in these patients were supravalvar mitral ring (22 patients), mitral valve abnormalities including parachute mitral valve, fused chordae, or single papillary muscle (26 patients), subaortic gradients (26 patients), and coarctation (29 patients). Nineteen patients had all four lesions. Other common defects were bicuspid aortic valve (19 patients) and ventricular septal defect (20). Two patients were treated medically. The other 28 patients required 84 operative procedures with 18 patients undergoing more than one procedure. Operations included coarctation repair (28 patients), mitral valve repair or replacement (11), ventricular septal defect closure (8), subaortic resection (8), and complex left ventricular outflow tract reconstruction or bypass (4). Age at first operation ranged from 7 days to 7 years (median age, 3 months). There were no operative deaths at the first operation. However, mortality rose to 24% (4/17) after the second operation. All operative deaths were secondary to severe mitral valve disease. The survivors have been followed from 1 to 16 years (mean follow-up, 6 +/- 1 years). There were no late or sudden deaths. Morbidity has included stroke (1), gastrointestinal bleeding (2), permanent heart block (1), and persistent congestive heart failure (6).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Shone's anomaly: operative results and late outcome. 236 86

A pneumatic pediatric ventricular assist device (VAD) with a stroke volume of 20 ml has been developed to treat post-operative heart failure (HF), and maintain transplant candidates. The polyurethane VAD has two #21 Bjork-Shiley valves and the internal diameter of the cannula is either 6 or 8 mm. Hemodynamic effects of a left ventricular assist device (LVAD) on a HF after Fontan's procedure model, and those of a right ventricular assist device (RVAD) on right HF with pulmonary hypertension model, were investigated in acute experiments with four and five dogs, respectively. In the former, the pressure gradient across the lung and cardiac output (CO) increased with an LVAD; right atrial pressure decreased and CO increased with an RVAD in the latter. The pump was implanted as an LVAD in 8 young goats, 9-22 kg in weight, for 4-10 weeks and favorable in vivo performance was demonstrated. The VAD system was applied as an LVAD to two postcardiotomy patients, a 12 kg boy with a ventricular septal defect, and a 13 kg boy with an endocardial cushion defect. In these cases, CO was well maintained at the level of 2.5-4.1 L/min/m2 for three and seven days, respectively, and the pump was removed. In conclusion, this VAD will become a promising circulatory support system for pediatric uses.
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PMID:Experimental evaluation and clinical application of a pediatric ventricular assist device. 259 46


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