Post-operative low cardiac output states remain a major cause of mortality following cardiac surgery in infants and children. Since 1979 we have used moderate induced whole-body hypothermia in the management of low-output states refractory to conventional modes of therapy. This is based not only upon the relationship between body temperature and oxygen consumption, but also on experimental work showing a beneficial effect of cooling upon myocardial contractility, particularly when there is pre-existing impairment of ventricular function. Between July 1986 and June 1990, 20 children with refractory low-output states were cooled by means of a thermostatically controlled water blanket to a rectal temperature of 32-33 degrees C. The median age was 12 months (1 week-11 years) with a median weight of 6 kg (3.5-33 kg). Ten children survived to leave hospital while a further two made a haemodynamic recovery. There was a marked reduction in heart rate (P < 0.001). The mean arterial pressure rose (P = 0.037) while there was a fall in mean atrial pressure (P < 0.001). There was a significant improvement in the urine output (P = 0.002). A fall in the platelet count (P < 0.001) was not accompanied by any change in the white cell count (P = 0.15). Although it is impossible to say whether cooling influenced the outcome in any of these children, it was usually effective in stabilising their clinical condition. The technique is simple and has a sound theoretical basis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The cases of 110 infants less than 1 year of age, who had surgical repair for coarctation of the aorta between June 1974 and February 1988, were analysed. Three groups of patients were identified. In group 1 there were 39 patients with isolated coarctation. In group 2 there were 25 infants with additional ventricular septal defects (VSD), while in group 3 there were 46 infants with other associated congenital cardiac defects. Repair was performed using the subclavian flap aortoplasty (SFA) procedure in 83 patients, resection with end-to-end anastomosis (EEA) in 23, patch aortoplasty in 3 and Goretex tube bypass in 1. Twenty-eight patients had simultaneous pulmonary artery banding and one concomitant closure of the VSD. The overall early mortality rate was 8.2% (5.1% in group 1, 0% in group 2, and 15.2% in group 3). Age at operation (under 1 month, p = 0.04) and other associated cardiac anomalies (p = 0.03) increased early mortality significantly. There were 11 late deaths (10.8%) among 101 patients followed from 1 to 15 years (mean 5.3 years). Twelve patients underwent further surgery for recoarctation, eight of them within 11 months. A further 11 patients currently have a Doppler gradient across their coarctation site of more than 20 mmHg, but have not undergone further surgery to the coarctation repair site.
Between 1977 and 1988, 27 patients between the ages of 4 and 22 years (mean 8.9) underwent a Fontan procedure with the use of an antibiotic sterilised aortic homograft. There were 15 patients with tricuspid atresia, 9 with univentricular heart and 3 others. The homograft was anastomosed to a right-sided pulmonary artery in ten, to a left-sided main pulmonary artery in eight and in nine patients the homograft connected the right atrium to the right ventricle. There were five early deaths (18.5%) unrelated to the homograft and two late deaths at 7 and 10 years postoperatively. Five patients have required removal of the calcified obstructed homograft with no death. In three patients patches were inserted, but in two patients with good right ventricles a second homograft was inserted. In three of the re-operated patients the homograft lay directly behind the sternum and the femoral artery was exposed and in two of them the femoral artery was cannulated before the chest was opened to control haemorrhage. Of the patients 74% are alive up to 15 years later, 15 with their original homograft. Eight (57%) of those still have their original homograft more than 10 years post-operatively.
The optimal management of pulmonary atresia with an intact ventricular septum in the neonate remains controversial. The introduction of balloon septostomy and prostaglandin has significantly reduced early mortality but early surgical intervention is necessary to obtain a more adequate pulmonary blood flow. Fourteen neonates with pulmonary atresia and an intact ventricular septum were admitted to the Wessex Cardiothoracic Unit, Southampton from 1979 to 1986. Thirteen patients underwent cardiac catheterization. Cardiac catheterization data and right ventricular angiograms were reviewed retrospectively. Four patients with tripartite ventricles underwent total repair. The others received various palliative operations (valvotomy + modified Blalock-Taussig shunt or modified Blalock-Taussig shunt alone). Retrospective analysis of the angiograms indicated that right ventricular morphology alone is not a satisfactory criterion for surgical management. We have been able to demonstrate that there is a good correlation between the diameter of the tricuspid valve and the diameter of the infundibulum and that successful neonatal repair is possible when the tricuspid valve diameter is above 80% of the normal value for weight and when the tricuspid valve diameter to infundibular diameter ratio (TV/Inf ratio) is 2.2 or less. In patients with a tripartite ventricle but inadequate TV diameter and TV/Inf ratio, a closed pulmonary valvotomy with a modified Blalock-Taussig shunt remains the treatment of choice.
SUMMARY Fifty‐two children, aged less than 5 years, with chronic lung disease or congenital heart disease were entered into a two‐centre open study to determine the immunogenicity and tolerability of Influvac®, a trivalent influenza sub‐unit vaccine. Seroresponses were determined following two intramuscular vaccinations with 0.25 ml of Influvac, four weeks apart. Any local or systemic reaction was sought. Seroresponses were age and antigen specific, with children older than 9 months showing better seroresponses to all three antigens. Both A/Taiwan and B/Panama strains met all efficacy criteria. A/Shangdong met two of the three criteria: seroconversion and mean geometric titre increase. Local (23%) and systemic (48%) reactions following either of the two vaccinations were minor in nature and resolved within a few days. The vaccine induced a strong antibody response against all three haemagglutinin antigens and was well tolerated. The incidence of local and systemic reactions was comparable with those reported in healthy adults.
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