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Published in: Pediatric Cardiology 7/2012

01-10-2012 | From Other Journals

From Other Journals

Journal Review Editors: Sanjiv Gandhi, Omar M. Khalid

Authors: Sanjiv Gandhi, Omar M. Khalid

Published in: Pediatric Cardiology | Issue 7/2012

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Excerpt

In this paper, the authors reviewed their series of Yasui operations. This procedure is employed in neonates with interrupted aortic arch and left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (IAA/LVOTO) or aortic atresia-severe stenosis with ventricular septal defect (AA/VSD) and two adequate-sized ventricles. This combines a Norwood arch reconstruction with a Rastelli operation, establishing a biventricular repair. From 2002 to 2011, 21 neonates aged 3–55 days (mean 12.2 days, median 7 days) had IAA/LVOTO (n = 13), AA/VSD (n = 7), or AA/IAA with aortopulmonary window (n = 1); ten (48 %) had genetic abnormalities (8 with DiGeorge syndrome). Based on clinical characteristics and surgeon preference, 6 had a primary Yasui repair (4 AA/VSD, 2 IAA/LVOTO); 15 were staged with an initial Norwood repair (3 AA/VSD, 12 IAA) followed by Yasui completion in 13 (2 await completion) 4.3–26.6 months later (median 6.9 months). Early mortality was zero with no interstage deaths in the staged patients. One patient died 2 months after staged repair. Since biventricular repair, 8 survivors (44 %) had reoperation for conduit replacement (n = 6), recurrent LVOTO (n = 1), or a residual VSD (n = 1). No patient requires a pacemaker. There were three late deaths after biventricular repair, all in patients with genetic syndromes and IAA/LVOTO. Actuarial survival after initial operation was 100 % at 1 year and 75 % at 5 years. Actuarial freedom from reoperation or death after biventricular repair was 14 % at 5 years.
  • The Yasui operation is a very effective procedure for patients with IAA/LVOTO and AA/VSD. Primary and staged repair have comparable results. Reoperation after biventricular repair seems inevitable, mostly for conduit replacement. Genetic factors may affect long-term survival. The decision when to apply this operation to the IAAA/LVOTO group of patients, as opposed to conventional primary repair, can be difficult and may be aided in the future by more sophisticated preoperative imaging techniques.
Metadata
Title
From Other Journals
Journal Review Editors: Sanjiv Gandhi, Omar M. Khalid
Authors
Sanjiv Gandhi
Omar M. Khalid
Publication date
01-10-2012
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Pediatric Cardiology / Issue 7/2012
Print ISSN: 0172-0643
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1971
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00246-012-0496-0

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