Showing posts with label Pulmonary Artery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pulmonary Artery. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Bifurcation stenting - RVOT. Branch PA, Coarctation



Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 2011 Sep 1;78(3):419-24. doi: 10.1002/ccd.23025. Epub 2011 Mar 30.
A novel technique for stenting pulmonary artery and conduit bifurcation stenosis.
Stumper O, Bhole V, Anderson B, Reinhardt Z, Noonan P, Mehta C.
SourceHeart Unit, Birmingham Children's Hospital, United Kingdom. oliver.stumper@bch.nhs.uk

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Distal conduit obstruction is a recognized complication after surgery for congenital heart disease requiring implantation of a conduit from the right ventricle to the pulmonary arteries. Endovascular stenting of distal conduit obstruction can be challenging due to the proximity to the pulmonary artery bifurcation.

OBJECTIVE: A technique is described, whereby a single stent is mounted onto two balloon angioplasty catheters in tandem. This ensemble was delivered to the distal conduit/pulmonary artery via a large Mullins sheath on two guidewires, one placed in each of the branch pulmonary arteries. The aim was to assess safety and efficacy of this novel technique.

MATERIALS AND RESULTS: Seven patients (mean age 13.4 (6.7-23.4) years, mean weight 44.2 (23-69) kg were treated with this method. The pressure gradient was reduced from 36 (26-52) mm Hg to 11 (8-15) mm Hg [P< 0.05]. RV/LV pressure ratio decreased from 0.85 (0.6-0.95) to 0.42 (0.35-0.5) [P < 0.05]. There were no significant complications. During follow-up over a median of 2.6 (0.3-6.7) years no patient required re-intervention or surgery.

CONCLUSION: This novel technique appears to be safe and effective for stenting stenoses just proximal to pulmonary artery bifurcation.

Copyright © 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.



Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 2011 Sep 1;78(3):425-7.



Dual wire technique for aortic coarctation stent placement.
Lampropoulos K, Budts W, Gewillig M.
SourceCongenital, University Hospitals Leuven, Belgium.

Abstract
A young adult presented for percutaneous treatment of a narrow aortic coarctation. A very large left subclavian artery originated immediately proximal to the coarctation. In order not to exclude or jail the left subclavian artery with a stent, a double wire technique was used. From a femoral approach, two guide wires were positioned, one in the aortic arch and another in the subclavian artery. A stent crimped over a 16-mm balloon and a 4-Fr catheter was advanced over the two wires within a 14-Fr long introducer sheath. The stent was successfully deployed and molded within the bifurcation by a kissing balloon technique, relieving the obstruction and leaving a guaranteed passage to the subclavian artery. The double wire technique is an elegant way to deliver a stent safely across a narrowing with guaranteed access to important side branches.

Copyright © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Surgery: Pulmonary atresia - VSD, MAPCAs, Unifocalization

Circulation. 2000 Apr 18;101(15):1826-32.
Early and intermediate outcomes after repair of pulmonary atresia with ventricular septal defect and major aortopulmonary collateral arteries: experience with 85 patients.
Reddy VM, McElhinney DB, Amin Z, Moore P, Parry AJ, Teitel DF, Hanley FL.
Divisions of Cardiothoracic Surgery, University of California, San Francisco 94143-0118, USA.

BACKGROUND: Pulmonary atresia with ventricular septal defect (VSD) and major aortopulmonary collaterals (MAPCAs) is a complex lesion with marked heterogeneity of pulmonary blood supply. Traditional management has involved staged unifocalization of pulmonary blood supply. Our approach has been to perform early 1-stage complete unifocalization in almost all patients.


METHODS AND RESULTS: Since 1992, 85 patients with pulmonary atresia, VSD, and MAPCAs have undergone unifocalization (median age, 7 months). Complete 1-stage unifocalization and intracardiac repair were performed through a midline approach in 56 patients, whereas 23 underwent unifocalization in a single stage with the VSD left open, and 6 underwent staged unifocalization through sequential thoracotomies. There were 9 early deaths. During follow-up (1 to 69 months), there were 7 late deaths. Actuarial survival was 80% at 3 years. Among early survivors, actuarial survival with complete repair was 88% at 2 years. Reintervention on the neo-pulmonary arteries was performed in 24 patients.

CONCLUSIONS: Early 1-stage complete unifocalization can be performed in >90% of patients with pulmonary atresia and MAPCAs, even those with absent true pulmonary arteries, and yields good functional results. Complete repair during the same operation is achieved in two thirds of patients. There remains room for improvement; actuarial survival 3 years after surgery is 80%, and there is a significant rate of reintervention. These results must be appreciated within the context of the natural history of this lesion: 65% of patients survive to 1 year of age and slightly >50% survive to 2 years even with surgical intervention.




MAPCAs arrangement in 11 patients with PA-VSD reported in JTCVS 1997 paper from Quebec:
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1997;114:727-737. One-satge midline unifocalization and complete repair in infancy versus multiple-stage unifocalization followed by repair for complex heart disease with major aorto-pulmonary collaterals. Christo I. Tchervenkov et al.

Group I (pt #1-6) had multi-stage repair:
Group II (pt #7-11) had single-stage repair:
Also see other postings on this subject:
Pre-op evaluation of PAs and MAPCAs
MAPCAs in PA-VSD
Surgery Algorithms for PA-VSD