The Mustard operation corrects the effects of congenital transposition of the great arteries by creating an intraarterial baffle to direct pulmonary venous blood to the tricuspid orifice and systemic venous blood to the mitral orifice. To identify the long-term effects of this procedure, we followed 372 patients with complete transposition of the great arteries who survived the Mustard operation for at least three months. The mean follow-up period was 4.5 years (range, 0.4 to 15.9); the mean age at operation was 2.0 years. Mean resting heart rates were consistently lower than those for age-matched normal children. Seventy-six per cent of the patients had sinus rhythm during the year of operation--a figure that decreased to 57 per cent by the end of the eighth postoperative year. Twenty-five patients died during the follow-up period, nine suddenly. Life-table analysis revealed a cumulative survival rate of 91 per cent for 11 years and 71 per cent for 15 years after the operation. No strong risk factor for sudden unexpected death identified. This study demonstrates that extended survival among patients with transposition can be expected after the Mustard operation. However, over time there is a decreasing prevalence of normal sinus rhythm in survivors, as well as a small risk of sudden death.
Ectopic automatic atrial tachycardia, an uncommon type of supraventricular tachycardia in children and adults, has been reported to be resistant to medical therapy, and surgical or cryoblation has been recommended. This report describes 10 infants and children (median age 6 months; range birth to 7.5 years) with automatic atrial tachycardia and their management and follow-up. Digoxin alone was unsuccessful in controlling tachycardia in all 10 patients but decreased the tachycardia rate by 5 to 20% in 8. Intravenous (0.1 mg/kg body weight per dose) and oral propranolol successfully suppressed tachycardia in three of five patients and oral propranolol successfully controlled tachycardia in two of five other patients. Class I antiarrhythmic agents--quinidine (three patients), procainamide (four patients) and phenytoin (three patients)--did not control tachycardia in any patients but made the tachycardia rate worse in three patients. Intravenous (5 mg/kg per dose) and oral amiodarone suppressed tachycardia in three of four patients and oral amiodarone suppressed it in another patient. Thus, intravenous propranolol and amiodarone were effective in acutely suppressing automatic ectopic atrial tachycardia and predicted the response to long-term oral therapy. One patient had persistent tachycardia after surgical ablation of the high right atrial ectopic focus, and another patient had unsuccessful catheter ablation of the high right atrial ectopic focus (25 J). During follow-up (10 to 28 months), ectopic atrial tachycardia resolved completely in four patients and was well controlled in four patients.
We demonstrated a significant endocrine stress response in infants with well compensated congenital cardiac disease undergoing cardiac surgery, but without adverse postoperative outcome. The use of large-dose fentanyl, with or without midazolam, with the intention of providing "stress free" anesthesia, does not appear to be an important determinant of early postoperative outcome.
Patients with congenital heart diseases are a growing population, and noncardiac surgeries will become an important health care issue. Patients with single ventricle physiology are a particularly challenging population who will undergo staged, palliative repair toward a final step of Fontan circulation. Although Fontan surgery creates a serial circulation in which the ventricle pumps blood to the systemic circuit, pulmonary blood flow occurs without a dedicated ventricle. Despite progress in outcomes, this abnormal circulation remains associated with various co-morbidities such as ventricular dysfunction, arrhythmias, protein losing enteropathy, and plastic bronchitis. Health care professionals must prepare for these patients to present to noncardiac surgery at any stage of intervention, possibly with complications. Given that staged, palliative repair has undergone multiple modifications, patients who present for surgery can vary in types and timing of the repair. Anesthesiologists who care for them must be familiar with perioperative issues to optimize outcomes, especially because congenital heart disease is a risk factor for increased mortality for noncardiac surgery.
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