This study was performed to determine the efficacy of balloon-expandable stents in the treatment of branch pulmonary artery-stenoses and conduit stenosis in children. A total of eight stainless steel stents were implanted in seven patients. Three patients had tetralogy of Fallot with pulmonary artery stenosis following total correction, one patient had conduit stenosis following correction of transposition of the great arteries, one patient had intra-cardiac conduit stenosis after septation for single left ventricle, and two patients had pulmonary artery stenosis after Fontan operation. Six stents were placed in the branch pulmonary arteries, one in the extracardiac conduit, and one in the intracardiac conduit. The mean age at implantation was 13 +/- 3 years and the mean weight 37 +/- 12 kg. Follow-up time ranged from 0.3-2 years. The diameter of pulmonary arteries with stenoses increased from 5.6 +/- 2.2 mm to 10.6 +/- 1.8 mm (n = 7). The systolic pressure gradient decreased from 56 +/- 26 mmHg to 22 +/- 16 mmHg (n = 5). No embolization or thrombotic event has been noted. One stent placed in the intracardiac conduit was compressed and fractured. These data indicate that balloon-expandable stents are useful in the treatment of pulmonary artery branch stenoses and extracardiac conduit stenosis in children. The use of stents for intracardiac stenosis may result in stent fracture.
The prognosis of coronary artery obstruction was studied in patients with Kawasaki disease. Between May 1973 and December 1987, coronary artery obstruction was diagnosed by coronary angiography in 30 patients (21 males, 9 females), of whom, only 8 (26.7%) had clinical symptoms. One patient died after 9 years of illness. Two complained of frequent chest pain, which disappeared after bypass surgery in one case and spontaneously in the other. Five had symptomatic myocardial infarction. Myocardial ischemia was diagnosed in 31.8% by treadmill stress testing, but was well demonstrated in 85.7% by thallium-201 myocardial tomography. Frequent ventricular premature beats, Wenckebach-type atrioventricular block, and ST-segment depression accompanied by chest pain were recognized by 24-h Holter monitoring. In the past, the methods used to determine the prognosis of Kawasaki disease patients with coronary artery obstruction were not adequate. However, the examinations used in this study revealed an improved ability to determine the prognosis in this disease. Myocardial tomography, in particular, provided a more accurate evaluation of myocardial damage. Ventricular arrhythmias seem to be a serious problem in these patients. Therefore, careful observation using these tests, especially myocardial tomography and Holter monitoring, should be done even if the patients are free of symptoms.
Postoperative myocardial perfusion and function were evaluated using thallium-201 myocardial imaging and technetium-99m cardiac pool imaging in five patients with an anomalous left coronary artery arising from the pulmonary artery. The patients underwent reimplantation of the left coronary artery at an age ranging from 10 months to 13 years. Postoperative electrocardiographic and radionuclide studies were performed both at rest and during stress 1 to 4 years after the operation. Electrocardiograms which were abnormal preoperatively returned to normal after surgery except that the T wave in lead aVL remained negative. Postoperatively, left ventricular ejection fraction measured by technetium-99m cardiac pool imaging was normal in all patients. Postoperative thallium-201 myocardial imaging, however, showed a perfusion defect with incomplete redistribution at the high-lateral or antero-lateral segment in all patients after a stress test. These data suggest that although myocardial ischaemic change decreases and global cardiac function improves after establishment of a dual coronary artery system, severe myocardial damage remains at the high-lateral or antero-lateral segment.
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