During a 12 year period from 1978 to 1989, 35 infants under 4 weeks of age underwent palliative surgery for complex congenital cyanotic heart disease with a short (1-1.5 cm) PTFE graft between the ascending aorta and the right pulmonary artery (modified Waterston shunt). Twenty-three infants had pulmonary atresia and 14 had severe pulmonary stenosis. Underlying cardiac lesions were tetralogy of Fallot (n = 11), single ventricle (n = 7), transposition complexes (n = 6), and intact ventricular septum and hypoplastic right heart syndrome (n = 13). There were 4 early deaths (10.7%) in the entire series, 2 of which were shunt related. Three of the 4 occurred during our initial experience with this shunt in 1978 and 1979. They led to the modified Waterston shunt being abandoned for 3 years in favor of other shunt procedures. Since 1983 one early death occurred in 28 infants (3.5% mortality) with no death in the latest 26 patients. All patients were followed up between 6 and 108 months. There were 4 late deaths, one of which was shunt related. We observed a significant difference in the shunt patency rate between 4 and 5 mm grafts: palliation was adequate after 2 years in 52% of the patients when a 4 mm graft was used and in 89% of the 5 mm graft group (p less than 0.005). Reshunting was necessary in 7 infants between 5 and 60 months after primary surgery. Recatheterization was performed in 17 infants for suspected shunt failure (n = 6) or diagnostic reasons (n = 11).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Using an isolated rat heart preparation (Langendorff perfusion, perfusion pressure 100 cm H2O) the correlation between the high-energy phosphate content and various left ventricular (lv) functional parameters of the hypertrophied heart (spontaneous hypertensive rats lv/body weight ratio 3.6 +/- 0.5 x 10(-3) was determined after normo- (30 min) and hypothermic (25 degrees C, 120 min) cardioplegic arrest and reperfusion, and compared with normal hearts (Wistar rats lv/body weight ratio 2.0 +/- 0.3 x 10(-3). St. Thomas Hospital solution was used as the cardioplegic agent. Before ischemia hypertrophied hearts had a significantly higher developed left ventricular pressure, pressure rate product and dp/dtmax, but a significantly lower ATP and total adenine nucleotide content. Irrespective of the mode and temperature of cardiac arrest there was a strong correlation both for normal and for hypertrophied hearts between the high-energy phosphate content expressed as ATP, total adenine nucleotides or the "energy charge" and the left ventricular functional parameters pressure rate product and dp/dtmax. The correlation coefficient ranged from 0.80 to 0.89 and was highest when the ATP content was plotted against pressure rate product (r = 0.89). There was a different slope for normal and hypertrophied hearts with a steeper decline of the left ventricular function in hypertrophied hearts for any given reduction of the myocardial adenine nucleotide content. Our results indicate that a similar reduction of the ATP or total adenine nucleotide content in both the normal and hypertrophied heart reduces left ventricular function to a greater degree in the hypertrophied heart.
In order to determine the incidence of subendocardial ischemia after open heart surgery, subendocardial blood flow was monitored in 171 patients subjected to mitral and/or aortic valve replacement or coronary revascularization by on-line calculation of Diastolic (DPTI) and Systolic Pressure Time Index (TTI). Body hypothermia with an esophageal temperature of 25 degrees C and magnesium-aspartate-procaine cardioplegia were applied for myocardial protection. Ten patients developed low cardiac output state with two early deaths. In the two patients with fatal low cardiac output DPTI/TTI remained below 0.8. In the remaining 8 patients DPTI/TTI rose to 1.4 after a mean recovery time of 36 hours. In 161 patients (94%) no low cardiac output state evolved and DPTI/TTI rose to 1.3 within 60 min. after termination of cardiopulmonary bypass. Our results indicate that body hypothermia of 25 degrees C combined with magnesium-aspartate-procaine cardioplegia can reduce the incidence of subendocardial ischemia, but does not prevent this complication completely after anoxic times beyond 60-70 minutes.
After induction of left ventricular hypertrophy by supravalvar constriction of the ascending aorta in mini pigs (ATP and lactate) were measured under different cardioplegic conditions. In normothermia and plain anoxic arrest ATP decrease and lactate increase were significantly slower in hypertrophied myocardium compared to normal myocardium. Injection cardioplegia using magnesium-aspartate-procaine at 37 degrees C did not influence the ATP decrease and lactate increase in the hypertrophied ventricle, whereas in the normal heart it showed some protection according to these parameters. Optimal ATP preservation and the lowest lactate increase rate were achieved in left ventricular hypertrophy by combined application of magnesium-aspartate-procaine and hypothermia of 25 degrees C. We conclude that normothermic injection cardioplegia has no protective effect on the hypertrophied left ventricle, whereas additional hypothermia can improve magnesium-aspartate-procaine cardioplegia significantly.
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